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Document: RDH-80-002-00-S
Date: 15-AUG-85
Project: NFT-10
Charge Number: 18-07155
Product ID:
FUNCTIONAL SPECIFICATION FOR
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive
Issued By: Robert Houk
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 2
12-Jan-84
COPYRIGHT (c) DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION 1984,1986,1988. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
THIS SOFTWARE IS FURNISHED UNDER A LICENSE AND MAY BE USED AND COPIED
ONLY IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE TERMS OF SUCH LICENSE AND WITH THE INCLUSION
OF THE ABOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICE. THIS SOFTWARE OR ANY OTHER COPIES
THEREOF MAY NOT BE PROVIDED OR OTHERWISE MADE AVAILABLE TO ANY OTHER
PERSON. NO TITLE TO AND OWNERSHIP OF THE SOFTWARE IS HEREBY TRANSFERRED.
THE INFORMATION IN THIS SOFTWARE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A COMMITMENT BY DIGITAL EQUIPMENT
CORPORATION.
DIGITAL ASSUMES NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE USE OR RELIABILITY OF ITS
SOFTWARE ON EQUIPMENT WHICH IS NOT SUPPLIED BY DIGITAL.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 3
Product Overview 12-Jan-84
1.0 Product Overview1.0 Product Overview1.0 Product Overview1.0 Product Overview1.0 Product Overview1.0 Product Overview
1.1 Product Abstract
NFT-10 is a user-mode system utility designed to provide distributed
file manipulation capabilities to TOPS-10 users.
NFT-10 provides facilities with which users may copy, change, and
delete data files residing anywhere within a DECnet computer network.
NFT-10 also provides the File Access Listener (FAL) which enables re-
mote systems to access files within the local TOPS-10 file system.
The NFT-10 command language will be similar to other TOPS-10 CUSPs
such as DIRECT, PIP, and the languages.
1.2 Markets
See the DECnet-10 product plan.
1.3 Competitive Analysis
Not Applicable.
1.4 Product Audience
NFT-10 is aimed at the TOPS-10 user who must deal with data files in a
distributed computer network.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 4
Product Goals 12-Jan-84
2.0 Product Goals2.0 Product Goals2.0 Product Goals2.0 Product Goals2.0 Product Goals2.0 Product Goals
2.1 Environments
NFT-10 will run under TOPS-10 7.02 or later monitors with DECnet net-
works.
NFT-10 has no explicit environmental requirements.
2.2 Reliability Goals
Since NFT-10 is the major data file access mechanism supplied with
DECnet-10 it must be of the utmost reliability.
It is a specific goal that NFT-10 will NEVER claim to have successful-
ly copied a data file when it has not in fact done so. NFT-10 will
have many internal redundancy checks on both internal program
operation and overall data integrity.
2.3 Non-Goals
It is not a goal that NFT-10 should replace PIP-10.
NFT-10 will not provide "OPR" control over FAL operations.
NFT-10 will not provide a queued network file spooling mechanism.
NFT-10 will not provide user accounting/logging information.
NFT-10 will not support non-sequential file access.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 5
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition3.0 General Functional/Operational Definition
NFT-10 (NIP/FAL/TSC Executive) is a user-mode system utility which can
manipulate (copy, rename, delete, execute) data files in a distributed
(network) computer system environment in response to user commands
either typed in from a command terminal or from a pre-defined commands
file.
NFT accepts commands in a "verb" mode compatible with native TOPS-10
command syntax. NFT command syntax is of the form:
<command> [[<arg>]] <eol>
Where <command> is the name of a valid NFT command function; and <arg>
is/are any required and/or optional arguments needed to complete the
command. All commands must be terminated by an End-Of-Line condition
(typically a carriage-return line-feed sequence).
Appendix A lists a syntactical definition of the command language in
general, and of "file specification"s in particular.
Command-specific switches are listed with each command description;
general non-command-specific switches are listed with each NFT mode
section; the "standard" file-specific switches are listed in Appendix
B.
The NFT program operates in one of three modes: NIP, FAL, or TSC. Each
operational mode is both conceptually and pragmatically distinct from
the others. In effect each NFT operational mode can be viewed as a
separate program, replete with its own prompt, set of commands, and
operational philosophy.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 6
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation
3.1 NIP Mode Operation
NIP (Network Interchange Process) is the default operational mode for
NFT, and is the mode in which NFT always starts.
NIP mode provides the interactive file manipulation facilities which
constitute the major visible portion of NFT as a whole.
NIP commands are:
1. COPY - Make new copies of selected files
2. DDT - Call DDT if it is loaded (force an "unsolicited break-
point")
3. DELETE - Delete selected files
4. DIRECTORY - List selected files
5. EXIT - Terminate program execution; return to monitor mode
6. HELP - Provide help on NIP operation
7. NETWORK - Display information about network nodes
8. PRINT - Queue selected files to line printer spooler
9. RENAME - Change the names and/or attributes of selected file(s)
10. SUBMIT - Submit selected files to batch command processor
11. TLINK - Cross-connect ("link") two terminals
12. TYPE - Type the selected files on controlling terminal
13. DDELETE - DAP-mode DELETE command
14. DDIRECTORY - DAP-mode DIRECTORY command
15. DRENAME - DAP-mode RENAME command
16. DSUBMIT - DAP-mode SUBMIT command
17. FAL - Enter FAL mode
18. TSC - Enter TSC mode
The general NIP command switches are:
/[NO]MOAN Do [not] issue general warning complaints.
The /MOAN switch is used to instruct NIP to issue warn-
ings when a dubious condition is encountered, typically
requiring NIP to make some "wild" guess (e.g., in a
file copy operation, the data type or data byte size)
in order to compete the command. The default is /NO-
MOAN.
/[NO]OKERROR Do [not] abort on execution errors.
The /[NO]OKERROR switch controls whether or not NIP
will abort the command if an error occurs. /OKERROR
directs NIP to ignore file access and I/O errors as
appropriate, issuing warning messages. /NOOKERROR in-
structs NIP to abort the current command on the first
occurence of a file access or I/O error. The default
setting is /NOOKERROR.
/TOTALS[:lst] Explicitly control the totals summary.
The /TOTALS switch controls the totals summary printed
at the end of the command execution. The various totals
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 7
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation
quantities (files, errors, etc.) may be individually
controlled by specifying the totals quantities to be
listed as the ":lst" value to the switch. All /TOTALS
quantities are "additive" in that the specification of
one quantity does not affect any other quantity. If a
quantity-name is preceded with a "NO" then that quanti-
ty will not be listed. If more that one quantity is
specified then the individual quantities must be separ-
ated with commas, and the entire list enclosed with
parenthesis. /TOTALS or /TOTALS:ALL directs NIP to
print a totals summary of all applicable quantities at
the completion (successful or otherwise) of the current
command. /TOTALS:NONE instructs NIP to not print a to-
tals summary. The /TOTALS quantitites are:
1. BITS - List the total number of data bits
2. BYTES - List the total number of data bytes
3. WORDS - List the total number of 36-bit words
4. RECORDS - List the total number of records
5. BLOCKS - List the total number of 128-word blocks
6. PAGES - List the total number of 512-word pages
7. FILES - List the total number of files
8. BAUD - List the effective data transfer rate (bits
per second)
9. ERRORS - List the total number of execution errors
Inappropriate items (e.g., DELETE/TOTALS:BAUD) are ig-
nored.
3.1.1 COPY command
The COPY command is used to copy one or more data files, optionally
providing limited manipulation of the data being copied.
The COPY command syntax is:
COPY [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or destination file specifica-
tion; and <in-fil-expr> is the input or source file specification
expression.
Although by definition an output file is required, the output file
specification is optional. If no output file specification is provided
then the output file specification is defaulted completely as de-
scribed below. Output file defaults are:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - * (filled in from matching input file name)
5. File Type - * (filled in from matching input file type)
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 8
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - COPY command
6. /IOMODE - determined by data type from input file
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - *
6. /IOMODE - determined by file creation mode, default is ASCII
By default, the COPY command will make exact copies of the files being
copied. NIP can provide some elementary data manipulation.
The COPY command-specific switches are:
/[NO]ARROW Do [not] print in "up-arrow" format.
The /[NO]ARROW switch controls whether or not ASCII
control characters will be "printed" literally or in
"up-arrow" form. /ARROW directs NIP to convert all con-
trol characters except tab, carriage-return, line-feed,
and form-feed into the corresponding arrow form. /NOAR-
ROW directs NIP to not convert control characters into
arrow form. The default is /NOARROW.
/[NO]BAUD Do [not] print the baud rate in the totals summary.
The /[NO]BAUD switch controls whether or not the totals
summary will include the baud (bits per second) rate of
the data transfer. /BAUD will always include the baud
rate in the totals summary. /NOBAUD will never include
the baud rate in the totals summary. The /[NO]BAUD
switch is merely a "shorthand" way of controlling the
printing of the baud rate without having to specify a
complete /TOTALS switch. The default for network trans-
fers is /BAUD, and /NOBAUD otherwise.
/[NO]CONCAT Do [not] concatenate input files.
The /CONCATENATE switch controls whether or not multi-
ple input files are concatenated into one single output
file or kept as separate distinct output files. /CON-
CATENATE directs NIP to combine multiple input files
into a single output file. /NOCONCATENATE directs NIP
to keep the input files distinct in separate output
files. The default is /NOCONCATENATE.
/CRLF:nnn Issue free carriage-return line-feeds.
The /CRLF switch controls the generation of free
carriage-return line-feeds if the ASCII line width ex-
ceeds "nnn" columns. /CRLF:nnn directs NIP to start a
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 9
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - COPY command
new line (issue a free carriage-return line-feed) if
the accumulated line width of the current line exceeds
"nnn" characters. If "nnn" is 0 then no free carriage-
return line-feeds will be issued. The default is /CRLF:
0.
/[NO]CSN Do [not] generate card sequence numbers.
The /CSN switch controls the generation or suppression
of card sequence numbers. /CSN directs NIP to supply
incremental card sequence numbers to each line ("rec-
ord") within the file data stream. /NOCSN directs NIP
to suppress card sequence numbers. The default is /
NOCSN.
/CSNCOL:nnn Sets the starting column for CSNs.
The /CSNCOLUMN switch is used in conjunction with the /
CSN switch to control the generation of card sequence
numbers. /CSNCOLUMN:nnn specifies the starting column
for the generation of card sequence numbers. The de-
fault is /CSNCOLUMN:72.
/CSNINC:nnn Sets the CSN incremental value.
The /CSNINCREMENT switch is used in conjunction with
the /CSN switch to control the generation of card
sequence numbers. /CSNINCREMENT:nnn specifies the in-
cremental value to be added to each succesive card se-
quence number (the "nnn" is also the first card se-
quence number). The default is /CSNINCREMENT:1.
/CSNWID:nnn Sets the width of the CSNs.
The /CSNWIDTH switch is used in conjunction with the /
CSN switch to control the generation of card sequence
numbers. /CSNWIDTH:nnn specifies the width (number of
digits) of each card sequence number. The default is /
CSNWIDTH:8.
/[NO]EBCDIC Indicates that the character data is [not] EBCDIC.
The /EBCDIC switch is used to control the translation
of ASCII data to or from EBCDIC data (depending on
whether the /EBCDIC switch is used on the output or
input file respectively). /EBCDIC indicates that ASCII
data should be translated in EBCDIC data. /NOEBCDIC in-
dicates that no translation of ASCII data into EBCDIC
data should be performed. If any character-oriented
processing of the data is to be performed (such as man-
ipulating "CSN's", "WRAPping" of lines, etc.) then
EBCDIC data must first be translated into ASCII data.
The default is /NOEBCDIC.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 10
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - COPY command
/FLAG:(UP- Flag upper or lower case characters.
PER,LOWER)
The /FLAG switch controls the "flagging" of certain AS-
CII characters. /FLAG:UPPER directs NIP to flag upper
case alphabetic ASCII characters. /FLAG:LOWER directs
NIP to flag lower case alphabetic ASCII characters. A
character is "flagged" by preceding the character with
a single quote character ("'"). The default is /FLAG:
NONE.
/[NO]LSN Do [not] generate ASCII line sequence numbers.
The /LSN switch controls the generation or suppression
of line sequence numbers. /LSN directs NIP to supply
incremental line sequence numbers to each line ("rec-
ord") within the file data stream. /NOLSN directs NIP
to suppress line sequence numbers. The default is /
NOLSN.
/[NO]LSNCON Do [not] reset LSNs on page boundry.
The /LSNCONTINUOUS switch is used in conjunction with
the /LSN switch to control the generation of line
sequence numbers. /LSNCONTINUOUS directs NIP to ignore
page boundries in ASCII files, and just increment the
line sequence number continuously for each ASCII line
of text. /NOLSNCONTINUOUS directs NIP to reset the line
sequence number at each ASCII page boundry. The default
is /NOLSNCONTINUOUS.
/LSNINC:nnn Sets the LSN incremental value.
The /LSNINCREMENT switch is used in conjunction with
the /LSN switch to control the generation of line se-
quence numbers. /LSNINCREMENT:nnn sets the increment to
be added to each successive line sequence number (the
"nnn" is also the first line sequence number). The de-
fault is /LSNINCREMENT:10.
/[NO]NULLS Do [not] preserve ASCII nulls.
The /NULLS switch controls whether or not NIP will sup-
press or preserve ASCII null characters. /NULLS directs
NIP to preserve ASCII nulls. /NONULLS directs NIP to
suppress ASCII nulls. The default is /NONULLS.
/[NO]SPACES Do [not] convert tabs into spaces.
The /SPACES switch controls whether or not NIP converts
ASCII tab characters into multiple spaces. /SPACES
directs NIP to replace ASCII tab characters with the
corresponding number of space characters. /NOSPACES di-
rects NIP to not convert tabs into spaces. The default
is /NOSPACES.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 11
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - COPY command
/[NO]TABS Do [not] convert spaces into tabs.
The /TABS switch controls whether or not NIP converts
multiple ASCII space characters into tabs. /TABS di-
rects NIP to convert (and compress) multiple spaces in-
to the corresponding number of tabs. /NOTABS directs
NIP to not convert spaces into tabs. The default is /
NOTABS.
/[NO]TRUNCA Do [not] truncate trailing blanks.
The /TRUNCATE switch controls whether or not trailing
ASCII blanks are suppressed (or truncated). /TRUNCATE
directs NIP to suppress or truncate trailing ASCII
blanks (i.e., spaces and/or tabs). /NOTRUNCATE directs
NIP to not supppess trailing blanks. The default is /
NOTRUNCATE.
/WRAP:nnn Word-wrap ASCII line after "nnn" columns.
The /WRAP switch controls the ASCII word-wrapper mecha-
nism. /WRAP:nnn directs NIP to issue a free carriage-
return line-feed at the first blank character after
"nnn" columns of text. If "nnn" is 0 then no word-
wrapping is performed. The default is WRAP:0.
3.1.2 DDT Command
The DDT command is used to enter DDT if it is loaded.
The DDT command syntax is:
DDT <eol>
DDT is the program debugger, and is typically not loaded with the
standard system NFT, but only with a "private debugging" NFT. To re-
turn from DDT-mode to NFT command mode, type <ESC>P (i.e., the normal
breakpoint procede command).
There are no DDT command-specific switches.
3.1.3 DELETE Command
The DELETE command is used to delete or destroy one or more data
files.
The DELETE command syntax is:
DELETE <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <in-fil-expr> is the input or source file specification expres-
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 12
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - DELETE Command
sion which identifies the files to be deleted.
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - not defaulted - must be explicitly specified
5. File Type - not defaulted - must be explicitly specified
There are no DELETE command-specific switches.
3.1.4 DIRECT Command
The DIRECT command is used to obtain a directory listing of one or
more files.
The DIRECT command syntax is:
DIRECT [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or listing file specification
(i.e., where the directory listing is made); and <in-fil-expr> is the
input or source file specification expression identifying those files
for whom a directory listing is desired.
Although by definition a listing file is required, the listing file
specification is optional. If no listing file specification is provid-
ed then the directory listing will be directed to the job's
controlling terminal. Listing file defaults are:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - TTY: if no listing file is specified, DSK: otherwise
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - a unique name will be generated
5. File Type - DIR
6. /IOMODE - ASCII
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - *
There are no DIRECT command-specific switches.
3.1.5 EXIT Command
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 13
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - EXIT Command
The EXIT command is used to terminate NFT/NIP program execution and
return to monitor level.
The EXIT command syntax is:
EXIT <eol>
The EXIT command takes no command arguments.
There are no EXIT command-specific switches.
3.1.6 HELP Command
The HELP command is used to obtain helpful information pertaining to
the NIP-mode operation of NFT.
The HELP command syntax is:
HELP [<command> [<switch>]] <eol>
Where <command> is a valid NIP mode command name; and <switch> is a
valid command switch for the specified command name.
If no <command> is provided, then a general terse description of NIP
operation is given, followed by a listing of each command available.
If <command> is given then a general terse description of the specific
command operation is given, followed by a listing of each command
switch available.
If <command> <switch> is given then a general terse description of the
specific command switch is given, possibly followed by a listing of
legal command switch arguments if appropriate.
There are no HELP command-specific switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The HELP command does not yet accept the [<command>
[<switch>] ] construction.
3.1.7 NETWORK Command
The NETWORK command is used to display information about network
nodes.
The NETWORK command syntax is:
NETWORK<in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <in-fil-expr> is the input node specification. Although full
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 14
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - NETWORK Command
file expressions are accepted, only the node name(s) has any semantic
meaning to the NETWORK command.
There are no NETWORK command-specific switches.
3.1.8 PRINT Command
The PRINT command is used to print files onto a line printer via the
system line printer spooling facilities.
The PRINT command syntax is:
PRINT <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <in-fil-expr> is the input or source file specification expres-
sion.
The actual operation of the PRINT command is dependent on the actual
operating system which executes the command, and has no intrinsic re-
lation to the system from which the command was issued. For either the
TOPS-10 or TOPS-20 operating system, the PRINT command passes the se-
lected file(s) to the line printer spooler for execution as a print
job exactly as if PRINTed normally from the account specified in the /
USERID switch.
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - none
There are no PRINT command-specific switches.
3.1.9 RENAME Command
The RENAME command is used to change the name or attribute information
of one or more files.
The RENAME command syntax is:
RENAME <out-fil> "=" <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or new file specification; and
<in-fil-expr> is the input or old file specification expression which
identifies the files to be renamed.
The output or new file defaults are:
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 15
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - RENAME Command
1. Node - unchanged
2. Device - unchanged
3. Path - unchanged
4. File Name - unchanged
5. File Type - unchanged
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - *
There are no RENAME command-specific switches.
3.1.10 SUBMIT Command
The SUBMIT command is used to execute command files via a command
interpreter or batch processing facility.
The SUBMIT command syntax is:
SUBMIT <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <in-fil-expr> is the input or source file specification
expression.
The actual operation of the SUBMIT command is dependent on the actual
operating system which executes the command, and has no intrinsic re-
lation to the system from which the command was issued. For either the
TOPS-10 or TOPS-20 operating system, the SUBMIT command passes the
selected file(s) to the batch processing facility for execution as a
batch job exactly as if submitted normally from the account specified
in the /USERID switch (SUBMIT is normally illegal if no /USERID has
been given).
There is no output file specification, any "log" files or the like are
generated in accordance with whatever rules are in effect on the re-
mote system which "executes" the SUBMIT command.
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - CTL
There are no SUBMIT command-specific switches.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 16
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - TLINK Command
3.1.11 TLINK Command
The TLINK command is used to establish a terminal to terminal "link"
for the exchange of ASCII characters.
The TLINK command syntax is:
TLINK [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or destination terminal specifi-
cation; and <in-fil-expr> is the input or source terminal
specification expression.
The TLINK command is identical to a TSC command, followed by a TSC-
mode TLINK command (see section 3.4.3 for a detailed description of
the TLINK command). It is provided in NIP mode solely as a conve-
nience.
3.1.12 TYPE Command
The TYPE command is used to type or print one or more files onto
[typically] the job's controlling terminal.
The TYPE command syntax is:
TYPE [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or destination file specifica-
tion; and <in-fil-expr> is the input or source file specification
expression.
Although by definition an output file is required, the output file
specification is optional. If no output file specification is provided
then the output file specification is defaulted completely as de-
scribed below. Output file defaults are:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - TTY:
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - * (filled in from matching input file name)
5. File Type - * (filled in from matching input file type)
6. /IOMODE - ASCII
7. Switches - /ARROW/BYTESIZE:7/NOTOTALS
The input file specification expression is required and is defaulted
as specified below:
1. Node - Local host
2. Device - DSK: if local host, none if a remote node
3. Path - [] (no explicit path selected)
4. File Name - *
5. File Type - *
6. /IOMODE - ASCII
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 17
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - TYPE Command
The TYPE command is essentially equivilent to a COPY command to device
TTY:, with a default of /ASCII/ARROW/BYTESIZE:7/NOTOTALS.
The TYPE command-specific switches are the same as for the COPY com-
mand.
3.1.13 DDELETE Command
The DDELETE command is a special DAP-mode variant of the more general
DELETE command.
The DDELETE command syntax is:
DDELETE <in-fil> <eol>
Where <in-fil> is the simple input file specification.
The DDELETE command may be used in place of the DELETE command when
exactly one simple file specification is used, and exactly one remote
node is specified (no node wildcards). Under these circumstances (for
the time being) the DDELETE command may execute much faster than the
more general DELETE command.
3.1.14 DDIRECT Command
The DDIRECT command is a special DAP-mode variant of the more general
DIRECT command.
The DDIRECT command syntax is:
DDIRECT [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output file specification; and <in-fil>
is the simple input file specification.
The DDIRECT command may be used in place of the DIRECT command when
exactly one simple input file specification is used, and exactly one
remote node is specified (no node wildcards). Under these circum-
stances (for the time being) the DDIRECT command may execute much
faster than the more general DIRECT command.
3.1.15 DRENAME Command
The DRENAME command is a special DAP-mode variant of the more general
RENAME command.
The DRENAME command syntax is:
DRENAME [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output file specification; and <in-fil>
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 18
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
NIP Mode Operation - DRENAME Command
is the simple input file specification.
The DRENAME command may be used in place of the RENAME command when
exactly one simple input file specification is used, and exactly one
remote node is specified (no node wildcards). Under these
circumstances (for the time being) the DRENAME command may execute
much faster than the more general RENAME command.
3.1.16 DSUBMIT Command
The DSUBMIT command is a special DAP-mode variant of the more general
SUBMIT command.
The DSUBMIT command syntax is:
DSUBMIT <in-fil> <eol>
Where <in-fil> is the simple input file specification.
The DSUBMIT command may be used in place of the SUBMIT command when
exactly one simple file specification is used, and exactly one remote
node is specified (no node wildcards). Under these circumstances (for
the time being) the DSUBMIT command may execute much faster than the
more general SUBMIT command.
3.1.17 FAL Command
The FAL command switches NFT into FAL mode.
The FAL command syntax is:
FAL <eol>
See section 3.2 for a description of FAL operation.
There are no FAL command-specific switches.
3.1.18 TSC Command
The TSC command switches NFT into TSC mode.
The TSC command syntax is:
TSC <eol>
See section 3.3 for a description of TSC operation.
There are no TSC command-specific switches.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 19
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
FAL Mode Operation
3.2 FAL Mode Operation
FAL (File Access Listener) is the NFT mode which provides the slave
processing which enables remote network processes to gain access to
the local TOPS-10 file system.
At least one FAL process must be running on each network node in order
for that node's file system to be accessible from the rest of the
distributed network.
FAL mode is entered via the "FAL" command to NFT. FAL must run as a
system-privileged process (i.e., as the OPR account).
FAL commands are:
1. HELP - provide helpful text on FAL operation
2. NETPPN - set default "NETPPN"
3. REJECT - reject incoming requests from specified nodes
4. START - start FAL I/O streams
5. NIP - enter NIP mode
6. TSC - enter TSC mode
3.2.1 HELP Command
The HELP command is used to obtain helpful information pertaining to
the FAL-mode operation of NFT.
The HELP command syntax is:
HELP [<command>] <eol>
Where <command> is a valid FAL mode command name.
If no <command> is provided, then a general terse description of FAL
operation is given, followed by a listing of each command available.
If <command> is given then a general terse description of the specific
command operation is given, followed by a listing of each command
switch available.
There are no HELP command-specific switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The HELP command does not yet accept the [<command>
[<switch>] ] construction.
3.2.2 NETPPN Command
The NETPPN command is used to set the default network access ppn.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 20
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
FAL Mode Operation - NETPPN Command
The NETPPN command syntax is:
NETPPN <ppn> <eol>
Where <ppn> specifies the project-programmer number.
The default network access ppn is used by FAL for file access valida-
tion when the remote accessor does not specify a USERID. This facility
allows remote accessors to gain some degree of access to the local
file system without requiring a valid account (to, e.g., read suffi-
ciently unprotected files). If <ppn> is blank then no default access
ppn is provided and only valid accounts may gain access to the file
system.
3.2.3 REJECT Command
The REJECT command is used to specify nodes and/or accounts which will
not be accepted by FAL.
The REJECT command syntax is:
REJECT <in-fil-list> <eol>
Where <in-file-list> is the list of nodes and/or accounts which will
always be rejected by FAL.
The REJECT command allows for the selective unconditional rejection of
"undesirable" remote file access requests based on the remote USERID
and/or remote node. The <in-fil-list> is a list of "file specifica-
tions" of which only the node and directory (ppn) names have a valid
semantic meaning (i.e., the file name, while syntactically accepted,
is ignored). If only a node is specified, then all access requests
from that node will be rejected; if only a directory (ppn) is
specified then all access requests whose USERID matches the directory
will be rejected; if both a node and directory are specified then all
access requests by the specified USERID on the specified node will be
rejected (but that USERID is still valid from other nodes).
Note Note Note Note Note Note
Currently, only one REJECT command is allowed, all desired
rejection specifications must be specified in the same RE-
JECT command. A second (or further) REJECT command will
override any previous REJECT command in effect.
3.2.4 START Command
The START command is used to startup FAL's I/O streams to allow remote
file access.
The START command syntax is:
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 21
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
FAL Mode Operation - START Command
START <ntyp> <eol>
Where <ntyp> is either "ANF" or "DECNET".
The START command directs FAL to start "FALling", i.e., to initiate a
quiescent I/O stream so that remote file accessors may gain entry into
the local file system. The START command does not actually start any
I/O, it merely enables the FAL process to receive and act upon remote
file access requests.
3.2.5 NIP Command
The NIP command switches NFT into NIP mode.
The NIP command syntax is:
NIP <eol>
The NIP command is illegal if any I/O streams are outstanding.
See section 3.1 for a description of NIP operation.
3.2.6 TSC Command
The TSC command switches NFT into TSC mode.
The TSC command syntax is:
TSC <eol>
The TSC command is illegal if any I/O streams are outstanding.
See section 3.4 for a description of TSC operation.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 22
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
TSC Mode Operation
3.3 TSC Mode Operation
TSC (Terminal Service Controller) mode provides a data link using an
asychronous terminal line.
TSC provides a data path analguous to a network logical link, but
using a regular 8-bit asychronous communications line (a "TTY") rather
than a formal network link. TSC provides all network management for
the async link.
The async link can be used either as a terminal line or as a file data
path into the remote system.
When the async link is being used as a terminal line the user's con-
trolling terminal is effectively routed directly into the async line -
TSC (and the TOPS-10 monitor) act solely as an expensive null modem.
When the async link is being used as a file data path the user can
transfer, rename, and delete data files on the remote computer system,
as well as obtaining directory listings of files resident on the re-
mote system.
The async link can be used as a file data path only with other TOPS-10
or TOPS-20 operating systems.
TSC commands are:
1. BOOT - bootstrap a TSC file server to the remote system
2. HANGUP - hangup and terminate dataset terminal link
3. HELP - provide helpful text on TSC operation
4. TLINK - establish a terminal link
5. TTY - enter into terminal dialoge mode
6. NIP - enter NIP mode
7. FAL - enter FAL mode
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The "file mode" usage of TSC is not yet implemented, only
the "terminal mode" commands work.
3.3.1 HANGUP Command
The HANGUP command is used to terminate the dataset terminal link by
"hanging up" the phone.
The HANGUP command syntax is:
HANGUP <eol>
The HANGUP command causes the phone to hangup, thereby terminating the
dataset terminal link. After the HANGUP command has been issued the
dataset terminal is released.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 23
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
TSC Mode Operation - HANGUP Command
3.3.2 HELP Command
The HELP command is used to obtain helpful information pertaining to
the TSC-mode operation of NFT.
The HELP command syntax is:
HELP [<command>] <eol>
Where <command> is a valid TSC mode command name.
If no <command> is provided, then a general terse description of TSC
operation is given, followed by a listing of each command available.
If <command> is given then a general terse description of the specific
command operation is given, followed by a listing of each command
switch available.
There are no HELP command-specific switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The HELP command does not yet accept the [<command>
[<switch>] ] construction.
3.3.3 TLINK Command
The TLINK command is used to establish a [dataset] terminal link with
another computer system.
The TLINK command syntax is:
TLINK [<out-fil> "="] <in-fil-expr> <eol>
Where <out-fil> is the simple output or destination terminal specifi-
cation; and <in-fil-expr> is the input or source terminal specifica-
tion expression.
The <in-fil> file specification is required. A terminal must be speci-
fied as the device. Any directory, file name, or file type are
ignored.
The TLINK command OPENs the specified terminal in special "packed im-
age mode" I/O data mode. The TLINK command does not itself perform any
terminal I/O, it merely establishes the terminal link. Actual terminal
I/O must be initiated via further TSC commands.
If the terminal is a dataset terminal with dialout capability, and the
user supplied a /DIAL:nnn switch with the <in-fil> specification, then
TSC will place an outgoing call on the dataset phone. When the call
completes successfully control is returned to TSC ready for terminal
I/O. If the call does not complete successfully then the dataset is
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 24
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
TSC Mode Operation - TLINK Command
released before returning control to TSC.
3.3.4 TTY Command
The TTY command places TSC into terminal dialoge mode using the async
terminal link.
The TTY command syntax is:
TTY <eol>
The TTY command is valid only after a terminal link has been esta-
blished with a "remote system".
Terminal dialoge mode effectively links the user's terminal directly
into the async terminal link path, providing a transparent terminal
connection to the remote system.
All characters except ^S, ^Q, and ^\ are sent directly to the remote
terminal line; all characters received from the remote terminal line
are sent directly to the users terminal.
The XOFF/XON (^S/^Q) protocol is obeyed with respect to the user's
command terminal.
The ^\ character is the escape character which will return to normal
command mode.
3.3.5 NIP Command
The NIP command switches NFT into NIP mode.
The NIP command syntax is:
NIP <eol>
The NIP command is illegal if a dataset terminal link is currently
active.
See section 3.1 for a description of NIP operation.
3.3.6 FAL Command
The FAL command switches NFT into FAL mode.
The FAL command syntax is:
FAL <eol>
The FAL command is illegal if a dataset terminal link is currently
active.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 25
General Functional/Operational Definition 12-Jan-84
TSC Mode Operation - FAL Command
See section 3.2 for a description of FAL operation.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 26
Compatibility 12-Jan-84
4.0 Compatibility4.0 Compatibility4.0 Compatibility4.0 Compatibility4.0 Compatibility4.0 Compatibility
4.1 Where Compatible
NFT will be generally compatible with native TOPS-10 command syntax,
and command conventions such as SWITCH.INI options defaulting.
NFT will be compatible with all TOPS-10 file formats.
NFT will be compatible with all Digital Equipment Corporation ASCII
file formats.
NFT will be compatible with DECnet DAP 6.0.
4.2 Where Incompatible
The command syntax used by NFT is not necessarily compatible with
corresponding command syntax used in the local operating and file sys-
tems implicitly accessed by NFT. In particular, the syntactical
definition of a file specification accepted by NFT may not match that
of the various non-TOPS-10 file systems.
The command syntax used by NFT is not compatible with DCLS (DEC Com-
mand Language Standard).
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page 27
Packaging and System Generation 12-Jan-84
5.0 Packaging and System Generation5.0 Packaging and System Generation5.0 Packaging and System Generation5.0 Packaging and System Generation5.0 Packaging and System Generation5.0 Packaging and System Generation
NFT-10 will be bundled with DECnet-10.
6.0 References6.0 References6.0 References6.0 References6.0 References6.0 References
DECnet Product Plan
DAP 6.0 Functional Specification
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page A-1
Appendix A: Syntax 12-Jan-84
Appendix A Appendix A Appendix A Appendix A Appendix A Appendix A
Syntax Syntax Syntax Syntax Syntax Syntax
This section formally defines the command syntax for NFT as a whole,
and for "canonical" file specifications in particular.
A.1.0 DescriptionA.1.0 DescriptionA.1.0 DescriptionA.1.0 DescriptionA.1.0 DescriptionA.1.0 Description
The following syntactical definition is a variation of the traditional
"BNF" construction, as follows:
Construct Meaning
ASCII-ooo The ASCII character whose octal representation in
the ASCII collating sequence is "ooo". This is the
axiomatic foundation of the entire syntactical
definition.
A blank space has no intrinsic meaning to the syn-
tactical definition, it is used merely to make the
definition more readable.
" xxx " The construction "xxx" enclosed within the quotes
is to be taken literally as specified.
< xxx > The enclosed construction "xxx" is a single "ele-
mentary" syntactical item. If the construction is
in lower case then the item is generic in nature.
If the construction is in upper case then the item
is specific in nature.
[ xxx ] The enclosed construction "xxx" is optional. The
construction may be omitted, or it may be speci-
fied exactly once.
[[ xxx ]] The enclosed construction "xxx" is optional, and
may be iterated indefinitely.
n * [[ xxx ]] The enclosed construction "xxx" is optional, and
may be iterated up to "n" times.
| The exclusive-or operator; "|" is used to separate
two or more constructions of which exactly one
must be choosen.
+ The inclusive-or operator; "+" is used to separate
two or more constructions of which any combination
may be chosen (the exact order is not relevant).
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page A-2
Appendix A: Syntax 12-Jan-84
Formal Syntactical Definition
A.2.0 Formal Syntactical DefinitionA.2.0 Formal Syntactical DefinitionA.2.0 Formal Syntactical DefinitionA.2.0 Formal Syntactical DefinitionA.2.0 Formal Syntactical DefinitionA.2.0 Formal Syntactical Definition
<ctlchr> ::= ASCII-000 | ASCII-001 | ASCII-002 | ASCII-003 |
ASCII-004 | ASCII-005 | ASCII-006 | ASCII-007 |
ASCII-010 | ASCII-011 | ASCII-012 | ASCII-013 |
ASCII-014 | ASCII-015 | ASCII-016 | ASCII-017 |
ASCII-020 | ASCII-021 | ASCII-022 | ASCII-023 |
ASCII-024 | ASCII-025 | ASCII-026 | ASCII-027 |
ASCII-030 | ASCII-031 | ASCII-032 | ASCII-033 |
ASCII-034 | ASCII-035 | ASCII-036 | ASCII-037 |
ASCII-177
<prtchr> ::= ASCII-040 | ASCII-041 | ASCII-042 | ASCII-043 |
ASCII-044 | ASCII-045 | ASCII-046 | ASCII-047 |
ASCII-050 | ASCII-051 | ASCII-052 | ASCII-053 |
ASCII-054 | ASCII-055 | ASCII-056 | ASCII-057 |
ASCII-060 | ASCII-061 | ASCII-062 | ASCII-063 |
ASCII-064 | ASCII-065 | ASCII-066 | ASCII-067 |
ASCII-070 | ASCII-071 | ASCII-072 | ASCII-073 |
ASCII-074 | ASCII-075 | ASCII-076 | ASCII-077 |
ASCII-100 | ASCII-101 | ASCII-102 | ASCII-103 |
ASCII-104 | ASCII-105 | ASCII-106 | ASCII-107 |
ASCII-110 | ASCII-111 | ASCII-112 | ASCII-113 |
ASCII-114 | ASCII-115 | ASCII-116 | ASCII-117 |
ASCII-120 | ASCII-121 | ASCII-122 | ASCII-123 |
ASCII-124 | ASCII-125 | ASCII-126 | ASCII-127 |
ASCII-130 | ASCII-131 | ASCII-132 | ASCII-133 |
ASCII-134 | ASCII-135 | ASCII-136 | ASCII-137 |
ASCII-140 | ASCII-141 | ASCII-142 | ASCII-143 |
ASCII-144 | ASCII-145 | ASCII-146 | ASCII-147 |
ASCII-150 | ASCII-151 | ASCII-152 | ASCII-153 |
ASCII-154 | ASCII-155 | ASCII-156 | ASCII-157 |
ASCII-160 | ASCII-161 | ASCII-162 | ASCII-163 |
ASCII-164 | ASCII-165 | ASCII-166 | ASCII-167 |
ASCII-170 | ASCII-171 | ASCII-172 | ASCII-173 |
ASCII-174 | ASCII-175 | ASCII-176
<char> ::= <ctlchr> | <prtchr>
<TAB> ::= ASCII-011
<LF> ::= ASCII-012
<VT> ::= ASCII-013
<FF> ::= ASCII-014
<CR> ::= ASCII-015
<XON> ::= ASCII-021
<XOFF> ::= ASCII-023
<CTRL-V> ::= ASCII-026
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page A-3
Appendix A: Syntax 12-Jan-84
Formal Syntactical Definition
<CTRL-Z> ::= ASCII-032
<ESC> ::= ASCII-033
<SPACE> ::= ASCII-040
<QUOTE> ::= ASCII-042
<blank> ::= (<SPACE> | <TAB>) [[<SPACE> | <TAB>]]
<eol> ::= <LF> | <VT> | <FF> | <CTRL-Z> | <ESC>
<letter> ::= "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F" | "G" | "H" |
"I" | "J" | "K" | "L" | "M" | "N" | "O" | "P" |
"Q" | "R" | "S" | "T" | "U" | "V" | "W" | "X" |
"Y" | "Z" | "a" | "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "f" |
"g" | "h" | "i" | "j" | "k" | "l" | "m" | "n" |
"o" | "p" | "q" | "r" | "s" | "t" | "u" | "v" |
"w" | "x" | "y" | "z"
<digit> ::= "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" |
"8" | "9"
<octdgt> ::= "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7"
<decdgt> ::= <octdgt> | "8" | "9"
<hexdgt> ::= <decdgt> | "A" | "B" | "C" | "D" | "E" | "F"
<sign> ::= " | "-"
<comment> ::= (";" | "!") [[<prtchr>]]
<cmdlin> ::= [[ [<cmdnam> [[<arg>]] [["-" [<comment>] <eol>]]
[[<arg>]] [<comment>] ] ]] <eol>
<arg> ::= <prtchr>[[<prtchr>]]
<octnum> ::= <octdgt>[[<octdgt>]]
<decnum> ::= <decdgt>[[<decdgt>]]
<hexnum> ::= <hexdgt>[[<hexdgt>]]
<octval> ::= [<sign>]<octnum>
<decval> ::= [<sign>]<decnum>
<hexval> ::= [<sign>]<hexnum>
<namchr> ::= <letter> | <digit> | "-" | <CTRL-V><prtchr>
<name> ::= (<namchr>[[<namchr>]]) |
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page A-4
Appendix A: Syntax 12-Jan-84
Formal Syntactical Definition
(<QUOTE><prtchr>[[<prtchr>]]<QUOTE>)
<cmdnam> ::= <name>
<nodnam> ::= <name>
<devnam> ::= <name>
<dirnam> ::= <name>
<projno> ::= <octnum>
<progno> ::= <octnum>
<filnam> ::= <name>
<typnam> ::= <name>
<genval> ::= <decval>
<swtnam> ::= <name>
<swtarg> ::= <arg>
<nod-spec> ::= <nodnam>("::" | "_")
<dev-spec> ::= <devnam>":"
<dir-spec> ::= "[" (<dirnam>[[("."|",")<dirnam>]]) |
([<projno>]","[<progno>][[("."|",")<dirnam>]]) "]"
<nam-spec> ::= <filnam>
<typ-spec> ::= "."<typnam>[<gen-spec>]
<gen-spec> ::= "."<genval>
<swt-spec> ::= "/"<swtnam>[":"<swtarg>]
<filopr> ::= "'AND'" | "'OR'" | "'NOT'" | "'IFAND'" | "'IFNOT'" |
"'IFSAME'" | "'IFDIFFERENT'" | "'IFOLDER'" |
"'IFNEWER'" | "'IFSMALLER'" | "'IFBIGGER'"
<naked-file-spec> ::= <nod-spec> + <dev-spec> + <dir-spec> +
<nam-spec> + <typ-spec> + <gen-spec>
<file-spec> ::= <naked-file-spec> + [[<swt-spec>]]
<file-expr> ::= <file-spec> [[<filopr><file-spec>]]
<file-expr-list> ::= <file-expr> [[","<file-expr>]]
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page A-5
Appendix A: Syntax 12-Jan-84
Commands
A.3.0 CommandsA.3.0 CommandsA.3.0 CommandsA.3.0 CommandsA.3.0 CommandsA.3.0 Commands
The command syntax used by NFT, in all modes, is:
<command> ::= <cmdnam> [[<arg>]] <eol>
The command is read from the command input stream, which by default is
initially the user's command terminal. The user can redirect the com-
mand input to any file system device which can provide ASCII input
data. This action is called command indirection, and the file which
contains the redirected ASCII input data is called a command file.
Command indirection has two different modes of operation, depending on
how the user invokes the command file. In both cases a command file is
invoked by specifiying an atsign ("@" character) in the command
stream, followed by the command file specification. Formally:
<cmdfil> ::= "@" <naked-file-spec>
A command file may be invoked anywhere within a command string as long
as the "@" is not in some way quoted. In effect, the "@" and the
following naked file specification (including the final delimiter) act
as a macro and are simply replaced verbatim with the corresponding
text (or "macro definition"). The "@" does however delimit the current
name or "field" being parsed.
If the command file invocation is the first thing on the line then the
command stream is simply switched or "indirected" to the specified
file(s), and command processing procedes normally.
If the command file invocation follows the command name then command
processing enters locked mode, wherein the specified command becomes
locked and all subsequent command stream input up to and including the
end of the invoked command file is considered to be part of one or
more iterations of arguments to the locked command.
This allows a list of files (contained in a command file) to be mani-
pulated as a whole rather than requiring a command to be present on
each separate line within the command file. For example, assume that
the command file "FILE.CCL" contains the text "FILE.1, FILE.2,
FILE.3". The sequence of commands:
RENAME *.*/PROTECTION:155 = @FILE.CCL
COPY MYCOPY.* = @FILE.CCL
DELETE @FILE.CCL
would: first) protect the three files so that they could be read;
second) copy the files; and third) delete the original files.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-1
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Appendix B Appendix B Appendix B Appendix B Appendix B Appendix B
Standard File Switches Standard File Switches Standard File Switches Standard File Switches Standard File Switches Standard File Switches
This appendix describes the individual "standard" file-specific
switches supported by NFT-10.
Basically, a file-specific switch is a switch which is associated with
one particular file specification rather than with a command as a
whole. File-specific switches are broken down into two classes: Con-
trol, and Qualifying.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-2
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
B.1.0 Control SwitchesB.1.0 Control SwitchesB.1.0 Control SwitchesB.1.0 Control SwitchesB.1.0 Control SwitchesB.1.0 Control Switches
Control switches govern or control file access. Control switches allow
the user to specify or modify aspects of file access which are not
normally used.
Control switches are:
B.1.1 /ALLOCATE:size
The /ALLOCATE switch is used to specify the physical file allocation.
/ALLOCATE accepts a single mandatory argument "size" which is the file
allocation in physical device blocks, expressed as a positive decimal
integer.
The /ALLOCATE switch indicates that the resultant file is to be guar-
anteed a specified minimum allocation on the device media. If the
specified allocation is not available then an error indication is giv-
en. Any "extra" blocks allocated at file close time are not
deallocated.
/ALLOCATE is meaningless on input files.
See also the /CONTIGUOUS and /ESTIMATE switches.
B.1.2 /[NO]APPEND
The /APPEND switch is used to specify that an output file is to be
appended to its extant predecessor.
The /APPEND switch accepts no arguments.
/APPEND indicates that the output file data is to be appended to any
extant file of the same name rather than to overwrite or supersede the
"old" file. /NOAPPEND indicates that the output file data is not to be
appended to any extant file of the same name.
The /APPEND switch is meaningless for input files.
See also the /SUPERSEDE and /UPDATE switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /APPEND switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.3 /BLKSIZE:size
The /BLKSIZE switch is used to specify the physical device I/O data
blocksize, which in turn specifies the minimum I/O buffer size.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-3
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/BLKSIZE:size
/BLKSIZE accepts a single mandatory argument "size" which is the de-
vice blocksize, expressed in terms of physical frame bytes (see also
the /FRAMESIZE switch).
The I/O data blocksize is the size of a single physical block or
record of data resident within the I/O device. A physical block has no
relation to a logical data record, it is solely a product of how the
device stores and retrieves data from its media. Actual I/O is ulti-
mately based on the physical device blocksize, as a physical block is
the minimum "unit" for an I/O operation (i.e., any read or write must
deal with at least one full block). As such, specifying the blocksize
also specifies a minimum I/O buffer size.
Generally, larger blocksizes provide more efficient utilization of the
device media, but with a corresponding cost of requiring larger I/O
buffers. Not all devices support variable blocksizes - DEC disks in
particular typically have a fixed blocksize. Other devices don't real-
ly have a blocksize at all - typical interactive command terminals
(such as a VT52 or VT100 for example) deal only with individual data
bytes.
B.1.4 /BUFFERS:count
The /BUFFERS switch is used to specify the number of I/O buffers to
use for input and/or output from/to the I/O device.
/BUFFERS accepts a single mandatory argument "count" which is the
number of buffers to use for I/O, expressed as a positive decimal
integer.
Generally, specifying more buffers allows the file system to more ef-
ficiently read/write the device media by "batching" several distinct
device blocks into one "scatter/gather" I/O operation.
B.1.5 /BYTESIZE:bits
The /BYTESIZE switch is used to specify the logical data bytesize.
/BYTESIZE accepts a single mandatory argument "bits" which is the size
of an individual logical data byte in bits, expressed as a positive
decimal integer.
The /BYTESIZE switch is used to explicitly select the size of an indi-
vidual logical data byte independently of the file data mode, the file
I/O mode, and the physical frame size.
A logical data byte is the actual unit data element being manipulated.
For ASCII character data a logical data byte is one ASCII character,
typically 7 bits in size, but may be 8 bits, or even 36 bits. A
logical data byte is contained within a physical frame byte (see /
FRAMESIZE). The logical data byte should not be larger than the frame
size since information may be lost (the highorder bits will be trun-
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-4
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/BYTESIZE:bits
cated to fit the framesize).
See also /DATAMODE, /FRAMESIZE, and /IOMODE.
B.1.6 /[NO]CONTIGUOUS
The /CONTIGUOUS switch is used to specify that the file is to be
created contiguously on its media.
The /CONTIGUOUS switch accepts no arguments.
/CONTIGUOUS indicates that the file to be created should be created
contiguously on the device media - the file may not be fragmented nor
may the file allocation cross a volume boundary. If the file cannot be
created contiguously then an error indication is given. /NOCONTIGUOUS
indicates that the file does not need to be created contiguously on
the media (although it does not prevent the file system from so
doing).
/CONTIGUOUS is meaningless for input files.
See also /ALLOCATE and /ESTIMATE.
B.1.7 /DATAMODE:mode
The /DATAMODE switch is used to specify the type of data being manipu-
lated.
/DATAMODE accepts a single mandatory argument "mode" which specifies
the type of data which makes up the file I/O stream. The legal data
types are:
1. ASCII
2. BINARY
3. IMAGE
The /DATAMODE switch is used to specify the actual data type which
constitutes the file I/O stream independently of the data bytesize,
framesize, and I/O mode selected.
See also the /BYTESIZE, /FRAMESIZE, and /IOMODE switches.
B.1.8 /[NO]DELETE
The /[NO]DELETE switch is used to [not] delete the specified file when
the file is logically CLOSEd.
The /DELETE switch accepts no arguments
/DELETE says to delete the file when the file is CLOSEd (i.e., when
the access of the file is completed, be it a read or write operation);
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-5
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/[NO]DELETE
/NODELETE says to not delete the file when the file is CLOSEd.
See also the /PRINT and /SUBMIT switches.
B.1.9 /DENSITY:bpi
The /DENSITY switch is used to specify the tape density to be used for
magnetic tapes.
The /DENSITY switch accepts a single mandatory argument "bpi" which is
the recording density in "bits per inch", expressed as a keyword. The
legal tape densitys are:
1. 200 - NRZI; 200 bits per inch
2. 556 - NRZI; 556 bits per inch
3. 800 - NRZI; 800 bits per inch
4. 1600 - PE; 1600 bits per inch
5. 6250 - PE; 6250 bits per inch
6. INSTALLATION - system default density
Although the tape density may be specified for both input and output
files, some tape drives will automatically select the "correct" tape
density for reading based on the tape itself, effectively ignoring any
explicit selection by the user.
See also the /PARITY switch.
B.1.10 /ERSUPERSEDE
The /ERSUPERSEDE switch is used to prevent the superseding of an exis-
tant data file.
The /ERSUPERSEDE switch accepts no arguments.
/ERSUPERSEDE indicates that an error indication is to be given and the
file creation aborted when a file create operation would supersede an
extant file of the same name. /ERSUPERSEDE is equivilent to /SU-
PERSEDE:NEVER.
/ERSUPERSEDE is meaningless on input files.
See also the /APPEND, /OKSUPERSEDE, and /SUPERSEDE switches.
B.1.11 /ESTIMATE:size
The /ESTIMATE switch is used to specify an initial file allocation
guideline.
/ESTIMATE accepts a single mandatory argument "size" which is the file
allocation in physical device blocks, expressed as a positive decimal
integer.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-6
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/ESTIMATE:size
/ESTIMATE is useful for indicating the approximate size of a file
without committing the file to that size. If the resultant file is
smaller then any unused blocks will be deallocated at file close time;
if the resultant file is larger then extra blocks will be allocated as
they are needed. /ESTIMATE merely gives the file system a chance to
optimize the placement and allocation of the file on the physical
media.
/ESTIMATE is meaningless on input files.
See also /ALLOCATE and /CONTIGUOUS.
B.1.12 /FIXED
The /FIXED switch is used to specify fixed length records, and is
shorthand for (identical to) /RECFORMAT:FIXED.
See also the /RECFORMAT, /RECSIZE, and /VARIABLE switches.
B.1.13 /FRAMESIZE:bits
The /FRAMESIZE switch is used to specify how logical data bytes are
packed within physical I/O bytes.
/FRAMESIZE accepts a single mandatory argument "bits" which is the
size of the frame byte in bits, expressed as a positive decimal
integer, which contains a single logical data byte.
The /FRAMESIZE switch is used to explicitly specify how logical data
bytes are packed within the file I/O stream, independently of the
actual data bytesize, data mode, and I/O mode selected. Logical data
bytes are packed right-justified one per physical frame "byte". For
most cases /BYTESIZE and /FRAMESIZE are the same.
/FRAMESIZE in no way affects the physical organization of the file I/O
bit stream on the device media.
See also the /BYTESIZE, /DATAMODE, and /IOMODE switches.
B.1.14 /IOMODE:mode
The /IOMODE switch is used to specify the device I/O mode to be used
for the file I/O stream.
/IOMODE accepts a single mandatory argument "mode" which specifies the
device I/O mode to be used. The legal I/O modes supported are:
1. ASCII
2. BINARY
3. BYTE
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-7
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/IOMODE:mode
4. IMAGE
5. IBINARY
6. PIM
Not all file systems necessarily support all listed /IOMODES.
/IOMODE is used to explicitly specify the device I/O mode to be used
for a file data stream independently of the selected data byte size,
data type, and framesize.
See also the /BYTESIZE, /DATAMODE, and /FRAMESIZE switches.
B.1.15 /[NO]LIB
The /LIB switch is used to control searching of any "libraries" on a
file open operation.
The /LIB switch accepts no arguments.
/LIB indicates that user- and/or system-defined libraries may be
searched in order to find the specified file. /[NO]LIB indicates the
no libraries are to be searched looking for the file - if the file is
not found as specified an error indication is to be given.
Not all file systems support automatic library searching.
/LIB is meaningless on output files.
See also the /NEW, /SCAN, /STRS, and /SYS switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /LIB switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.16 /[NO]MACY11
The /[NO]MACY11 switch is used to control reading and/or writing of
files in "MACY11" mode.
The /MACY11 switch accepts no arguments.
MACY11 mode (in honor of the PDP-11 cross assembler of the same name)
is a record-formatted 8-bit-byte binary file access mode wherein 8-bit
data (such as used for PDP-11s, VAXii, and the like) is stored in 36-
bit words, preserving record-length information as required by the
various 8-bit minicomputers.
/MACY11 forces /BYTESIZE:8, /BINARY, and ignores completely /RECFORMAT
and /RECSIZE.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-8
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/[NO]MECY11
B.1.17 /[NO]MECY11
The /[NO]MECY11 switch is used like the /MACY11 switch.
The /MECY11 switch accepts no arguments.
/MECY11 behaves exactly like /MACY11 except that in writing "MACY11"
formatted files the "PDP-11 words" will always be aligned into PDP-10
halfwords for ease of looking at the file with (e.g.,) FILDDT.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The MACY11 cross-assembler (and thus the /MACY11 switch
which mimics same) writes 6 null filler bytes between logi-
cal records. This results in every other record being half-
word-aligned, with the interspersed records being split
across halfwords.
B.1.18 /[NO]NEW
The /NEW switch is used to control searching the system "experimental
library" when the system device "SYS" is specified.
The /NEW switch accepts no arguments.
/NEW indicates that whenever the system device "SYS" is specified the
file system should look first on the system experimental library "NEW"
before using the standard system library. /NONEW indicates that the
system experimental library "NEW" should not be searched when search-
ing the standard system library.
Not all file systems support the "NEW" concept.
/NEW is meaningless on output files.
See also the /LIB, /SCAN, /STRS and /SYS switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /NEW switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.19 /OKSUPERSEDE
The /OKSUPERSEDE switch is used to control the superseding of extant
data files.
The /OKSUPERSEDE switch accepts no arguments.
/OKSUPERSEDE indicates that a file create operation may supersede any
already-existing file of the same name. /OKSUPERSEDE is equivilent to
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-9
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/OKSUPERSEDE
/SUPERSEDE:ALWAYS.
/OKSUPERSEDE is meaningless for input files.
See also the /APPEND, /ERSUPERSEDE, and /SUPERSEDE switches.
B.1.20 /PARITY:par
The /PARITY switch is used to select the data parity used for magnetic
tapes.
/PARITY accepts a single mandatory argument "par" which selects the
resultant tape parity. Legal arguments are:
1. EVEN - read/write even parity
2. ODD - read/write odd parity
Although /PARITY is legal for both input and output file specifica-
tions, some tape drives may automatically select the "correct" read
parity based on the physical tape, ignoring any explicit specification
by the user.
See also the /DENSITY switch.
B.1.21 /PASSWORD[:psw]
The /PASSWORD switch is used to specify the password necessary to gain
access to a protected file.
/PASSWORD accepts a single argument "psw" which is the password, ex-
pressed as a possibly-quoted character string, needed to gain access
to the specified file. If no argument is explicitly provided then the
user will be asked for the password at the time of the file access.
The /PASSWORD switch enables access to a specific file which is
normally protected such that the file access would otherwise be de-
nied.
/PASSWORD is valid only for a remote network file access operation, it
is meaningless for a local file access.
The exact behaviour of /PASSWORD is dependent on the remote file sys-
tem being accessed. In particular, not all file systems necessarily
support password access. Further, it is unspecified whether or not the
password is verified before the file access is attempted (i.e., if the
file is not protected then the password might be ignored, even if it
is invalid).
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /PASSWORD switch is completely independent of (and has
absolutely nothing to do with) the /USERID switch - /PASS-
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-10
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/PASSWORD[:psw]
WORD specifies a file-specific password, whereas /USERID
governs access to a remote node, without regard to the file
access operation. The password for the /USERID is specified
only with the /USERID switch, and NOT with the /PASSWORD
switch.
B.1.22 /[NO]PHYSICAL
The /PHYSICAL switch controls usage of logical device name defini-
tions.
/PHYSICAL accepts no arguments.
/PHYSICAL indicates that the file system should ignore any logical
device definitions and use only system physical device definitions to
select a device. /[NO]PHYSICAL indicates that logical device defini-
tions are acceptable.
B.1.22.1 /[NO]PRINT
The /[NO]PRINT switch is used to cause the file to [not] be printed
when the file is CLOSEd.
The /PRINT switch accepts no arguments.
/PRINT specifies that the file is to be printed (i.e., "queued" to the
system line printer spooler facility to be printed on a line printer)
when the file is CLOSEd; /NOPRINT specifies that the file is not to be
printed when the file is CLOSEd.
See also the /DELETE and /SUBMIT switches.
B.1.23 /PROTECTION:prot
The /PROTECTION switch is used to specify the access protection at-
tributes of a file.
/PROTECTION accepts a single mandatory argument "prot" which is the
file access protection code, expressed as an octal integer in the
range 1 to 777. A protection code of 0 selects the default protection
for the job/system.
/PROTECTION is meaningless for input files.
B.1.24 /QUERY[:nta]
The /QUERY switch is used to selectively accept or reject [presumably
wildcarded] file operations.
/QUERY accepts a single argument "nta" specifying the type of query
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-11
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/QUERY[:nta]
processing requested. The types of query processing available are:
1. NEVER - no processing
2. TELL - just list the file(s) selected
3. ASK - confirm operation with user
The default if no argument is supplied is "ASK" (many commands will
default to /QUERY:TELL if no explicit /QUERY is specified).
B.1.24.1 /QUERY:NEVER
/QUERY:NEVER indicates that all query processing should be suppressed.
B.1.24.2 /QUERY:TELL
/QUERY:TELL indicates that each file selected should be listed on the
command output device.
B.1.24.3 /QUERY:ASK
/QUERY:ASK indicates that each file selected should be listed on the
command output device.
The user is then prompted to either accept or reject the file selected
by typing either "YES" or "NO". This answer ALWAYS comes from the
command input terminal even if the original file access command is
from a command file. A "blank" answer (i.e., carriage return) defaults
to either "YES" or "NO" as appropriate; any other answer will
reprompt.
If the prompt is "[Y/N]" then the default is "YES"; if the prompt is
"[N/Y]" then the default is "NO".
B.1.25 /RECFORMAT:format
The /RECFORMAT switch is used to specify the type of record format
associated with a file I/O stream.
/RECFORMAT accepts the record format type, expressed as a single key-
word which defines the record structure used by the file I/O stream.
The record formats are:
1. NONE - no record formatting
2. FIXED - fixed length records
3. VARIABLE - variable length records
4. VFC - variable length records with fixed length header
5. 36PACK - bizarre packing of 36-bit words into 8-bit bytes
Not all file systems necessarily support any or all of the listed
record format types.
The /RECFORMAT switch allows the user to explicitly specify the struc-
ture of the file data records which constitute the file I/O stream
independently of the data and I/O modes employed.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-12
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/RECFORMAT:format
See also the /FIXED, /RECSIZE, and /VARIABLE switches. The 36PACK rec-
ord format controls the "funny" packing of 36-bit data into 8-bit
bytes in such a manner that 36-bit data is able to be stored on and
retrieved from 8-bit systems such as RSX or VAX. The 36-bit data is
stored in 4.5 consecutive 8-bit bytes (or consecutive pairs of 36-bit
words are stored in 9 consecutive 8-bit bytes) as per the DAP bit-
packing specification:
7 4 3 0
-------------
Byte 0/ | 28 - 35 |
-------------
Byte 1/ | 20 - 27 |
-------------
Byte 2/ | 12 - 19 |
-------------
Byte 3/ | 04 - 11 |
-------------
Byte 4/ |00-03:32-35|
-------------
Byte 5/ | 24 - 31 |
-------------
Byte 6/ | 16 - 23 |
-------------
Byte 7/ | 08 - 15 |
-------------
Byte 8/ | 00 - 07 |
-------------
B.1.26 /RECSIZE:size
The /RECSIZE switch is used to specify the size of the file data
records which constitute the file I/O stream.
/RECSIZE accepts a single mandatory argument "size" which is the size
of the file data records, expressed in terms of data bytes as a
positive decimal integer.
The /RECSIZE switch is used to explicitly specify the file data record
size for the file I/O stream. The record size includes any record
header associated with the record. For fixed length records the record
size specifies the size of all records. For variable length records
the record size specifies the maximum record size allowable - actual
records may well be much smaller.
See also the /RECFORMAT switch.
B.1.27 /[NO]SCAN
The /SCAN switch is used to control directory tree scanning on a file
access operation.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-13
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/[NO]SCAN
The /SCAN switch accepts no arguments.
/SCAN indicates that the file system should scan the specified direc-
tory tree looking for the specified file if the file is not found in
the specified directory. /NOSCAN indicates that directory tree scan-
ning should not be performed.
Not all file systems support directory tree scanning.
/SCAN is meaningless on output files.
See also the /LIB, /NEW, /STRS, and /SYS switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /SCAN switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.28 /[NO]SUBMIT
The /[NO]SUBMIT switch is used to cause the file to [not] be SUBMITted
when the file is CLOSEd.
The /SUBMIT switch accepts no arguments.
/SUBMIT specifies that the file is to be SUBMITted (i.e., "queued" to
the system batch processor facility) when the file is CLOSEd; /NOSUB-
MIT specifies that the file is not to be submitted when the file is
CLOSEd.
See also the /DELETE and /PRINT switches.
B.1.29 /SUPERSEDE:cond
The /SUPERSEDE switch controls the superseding of extant files.
/SUPERSEDE accepts a single argument "cond", expressed as a keyword
name, which specifies the conditions under which the extant file may
be superseded. The keywords are:
1. NEVER - never supersede an extant file
2. OLDER - supersede only if extant file is older
3. NEWER - supersede only if extant file is newer
4. ALWAYS - always supersede extant file
/SUPERSEDE:NEVER is equivilent to /ERSUPERSEDE; /SUPERSEDE:ALWAYS is
equivilent to /OKSUPERSEDE.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /SUPERSEDE switch is not yet implemented.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-14
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/SUPERSEDE:cond
B.1.30 /[NO]SYS
The /SYS switch is used to control system library searching on a file
access operation.
The /SYS switch accepts no arguments.
/SYS indicates that the file system should search the system library
area (as further controlled by the /NEW switch) if the specified file
is not found. /NOSYS indicates that the system library should not be
searched if the file is not found.
Not all file systems support system library searching.
/SYS is meaningless for output files.
See also the /LIB, /NEW, /SCAN, and /STRS switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /SYS switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.31 /[NO]UPDATE
The /UPDATE switch is used to specify that an output file is to be
overwritten rather than superseded (or appended).
The /UPDATE switch accepts no arguments.
/UPDATE indicates that the output file data is to overwrite any extant
file of the same name rather than to supersede or append the "old"
file. /NOUPDATE indicates that the file is not to be overwritten.
/UPDATE is meaningless for input files.
See also the /APPEND and /SUPERSEDE switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /UPDATE switch is not yet implemented.
B.1.32 /USERID[:[uid][:[act][:psw]]]
The /USERID switch is used to specify the "on-behalf-of" access
verification and accounting for file access operations.
/USERID accepts up to three optional arguments "uid", "act", and
"psw", each of which is a possibly-quoted ASCII character string. The
"uid" argument string may additionally contain the directory bracket-
ting characters "[", "]", "<", ">", as well as the comma (","), dot
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-15
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Control Switches
/USERID[:[uid][:[act][:psw]]]
("."), and underscore ("_") characters.
The /USERID switch is used to identify file access requests with user
accounting and access verification mechanisms associated with the file
system. The "uid" argument is the "userid" (or user name or user ac-
count or user ppn) to be used by the remote for the file access; the
"act" is any optional accounting information associated with the spec-
ified userid; and "psw" is the password associated with the specified
userid (and typically used to verify the userid file access rights).
/USERID is valid only for a remote network file access operation; it
is meaningless for local file access.
Basically, /USERID is used to identify yourself to the remote file
system (and operating system) as a known "local" user. This allows the
file system to grant file access in terms of local users without
having to deal with non-secure network interfaces. It further allows
for more detailed accounting operations to be performed, charging the
file access to a known account.
The actual operation of /USERID is dependent on the remote file system
selected - not all file systems necessarily support the /USERID func-
tionality, or even require that a /USERID be supplied by the accessor.
For use with NFT, the various arguments may be left blank and NFT will
prompt for the three fields at program runtime as the file specifica-
tion is actually being used.
B.1.33 /VARIABLE
The /VARIABLE switch is used to specify variable length records, and
is shorthand for (identical to) /RECFORMAT:VARIABLE.
See also the /FIXED, /RECFORMAT, and /RECSIZE switches.
B.1.34 /VERSION:ver
The /VERSION switch is used to specify the file's "version" attribute.
/VERSION accepts a single mandatory argument "ver", expressed as a
standard TOPS-10 version string, which is to be the file's created
version.
Not all file systems necessarily support the version attribute.
/VERSION is meaningless for input files.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-16
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
B.2.0 Qualifying SwitchesB.2.0 Qualifying SwitchesB.2.0 Qualifying SwitchesB.2.0 Qualifying SwitchesB.2.0 Qualifying SwitchesB.2.0 Qualifying Switches
Qualifying switches are used to "qualify" or constrain the naked file
specification insofar as the actual selection of a resultant file is
concerned. In effect, qualifying switches act as implicit wildcard
operations, accepting or rejecting files based on some specified con-
straint.
Qualifying switches are:
B.2.1 /ABEFORE:datime
The /ABEFORE switch restricts file selection to those files accessed
before the specified date/time.
/ABEFORE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as
either an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to
the present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/ABEFORE is used to allow only files which have been accessed (i.e.,
read, written, or updated) before a specifed date/time. Any file which
fails the specified /ABEFORE constraint is considered to not match the
file specification, and will not be used.
/ABEFORE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ASINCE, /BEFORE, /SINCE, /PBEFORE, and /PSINCE switches.
B.2.2 /ANYDEV
The /ANYDEV switch is used to specify whether or not any device type
is acceptable.
The /ANYDEV switch accepts no arguments.
/ANYDEV indicates that any device type is acceptable for the file
specification (i.e., impose no constraints on device selection). For
input files, the device types searched include disks, magnetic tapes,
DECtapes, line printers, card readers, card punches, paper tape
readers, paper tape punches, plotters, and terminals. For output files
no device constraints will be applied. /ANYDEV implies /TTYDEV (refer
to the /TTYDEV switch below).
See also /DSKONLY and /TTYDEV.
B.2.3 /ASINCE:datime
The /ASINCE switch restricts file selection to those files accessed
since the specified date/time.
/ASINCE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-17
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/ASINCE:datime
either an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to
the present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/ASINCE is used to allow only files which have not been accessed
(i.e., read, written, or updated) since a specifed date/time. Any file
which fails the specified /ASINCE constraint is considered to not
match the file specification, and will not be used.
/ASINCE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ABEFORE, /BEFORE, /SINCE, /PBEFORE, and /PSINCE switch-
es.
B.2.4 /BEFORE:datime
The /BEFORE switch restricts file selection to those files logically
created before the specified date/time.
/BEFORE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as
either an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to
the present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/BEFORE is used to allow only files which were created before a spec-
ifed date/time. Any file which fails the specified /BEFORE constraint
is considered to not match the file specification, and will not be
used. /BEFORE uses the file's logical data creation date/time which is
independent of the file's physical creation on the device media (in
particular, COPYing a file does not change the logical creation date/
time but does change the new file's media creation date/time).
/BEFORE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ABEFORE, /ASINCE, /SINCE, /PBEFORE, and /PSINCE switch-
es.
B.2.5 /[NO]DSKONLY
The /DSKONLY switch is used to restrict input devices to disks only.
The /DSKONLY switch accepts no arguments.
/DSKONLY indicates that only disk-type devices are to be accepted, all
other devices should be ignored/rejected. /NODSKONLY indicates that
the disk-only constraint is not to be applied.
See also the /ANYDEV and /TTYDEV switches.
B.2.6 /ERNONE
The /ERNONE switch controls the issuance of an error if no files match
the input request.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-18
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/ERNONE
The /ERNONE switch accepts no arguments.
/ERNONE indicates that an error indication is to be issued if no files
are found which match the input file specification.
See also the /OKNONE switch.
B.2.7 /ERPROT
The /ERPROT switch controls the issuance of an error if a potential
file is protected.
The /ERPROT switch accepts no arguments.
/ERPROT indicates that a file protection violation (e.g., attempting
to read a file that is read-protected) is to cause an error indication
rather than being ignored.
See also the /OKPROT switch.
B.2.8 /LENGTH:min[:max]
The /LENGTH switch is used to specify file size constraints.
/LENGTH accepts two arguments "min" and "max"; "min" is mandatory and
is the minimum file size, expressed in words as a positive decimal
integer; "max" is optional and is the maximum file size, expressed in
words as a positive decimal integer.
The /LENGTH switch is used to select input files whose data size (as
distinct from allocated size) is greater than or equal to the
specified minimum, and less than or equal to the specified maximum -
if any. Any file whose data size does not meet the specified con-
straints is considered to not match the file specification, and will
not be used.
/LENGTH is meaningless on output files.
B.2.9 /OKNONE
The /OKNONE switch controls the issuance of an error message if no
files are found to match the file specification.
The /OKNONE switch accepts no arguments.
/OKNONE indicates that no error indication is to be given if no files
are found to match the input file specification.
See also the /ERNONE switch.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-19
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/OKPROT
B.2.10 /OKPROT
The /OKPROT switch controls the issuance of an error message if a
potential file is protected against access.
The /OKPROT switch accepts no arguments.
/OKPROT indicates that file protection failures are acceptable and
should not cause an error indication to be given.
See also the /ERPROT switch.
B.2.11 /PBEFORE:datime
The /PBEFORE switch restricts file selection to those files physically
created before the specified date/time.
/PBEFORE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as
either an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to
the present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/PBEFORE is used to allow only files which were physically created
before a specifed date/time. Any file which fails the specified /
PBEFORE constraint is considered to not match the file specification,
and will not be used. /PBEFORE uses the file's media creation date/
time, which is distinct from the file's logical data creation date/
time.
/PBEFORE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ABEFORE, /ASINCE, /BEFORE, /SINCE, and /PSINCE switches.
B.2.12 /PSINCE:datime
The /PSINCE switch restricts file selection to those files physically
created after the specified date/time.
/PSINCE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as
either an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to
the present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/PSINCE is used to allow only files which were physically created
after a specifed date/time. Any file which fails the specified /PSINCE
constraint is considered to not match the file specification, and will
not be used. /PSINCE uses the file's media creation date/time which is
distinct from the file's logical data creation date/time.
/PSINCE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ABEFORE, /ASINCE, /BEFORE, /SINCE, and /PBEFORE switch-
es.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-20
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/PSINCE:datime
B.2.13 /SINCE:datime
The /SINCE switch restricts file selection to those files logically
created since the specified date/time.
/SINCE accepts a single mandatory argument "datime", expressed as ei-
ther an absolute date and time or as a period of time relative to the
present, which specifies the file selection constraint.
/SINCE is used to allow only files which were created after a specifed
date/time. Any file which fails the specified /SINCE constraint is
considered to not match the file specification, and will not be used.
/BEFORE uses the file's logical data creation date/time which is
independent of the file's physical creation on the device media (in
particular, COPYing a file does not change the logical creation date/
time but does change the new file's media creation date/time).
/SINCE is meaningless for output files.
See also the /ABEFORE, /ASINCE, /BEFORE, /PBEFORE, and /PSINCE switch-
es.
B.2.14 /SCERROR:keyword
The /SCERROR switch controls the relative error constraints used in
secondary wildcarding operations.
/SCERROR accepts a single mandatory argument "keyword" which identi-
fies the error constraints, expressed as a name, to be applied to
secondary file wildcarding operations. The acceptable error con-
straints are:
1. NEVER - no constraints imposed
2. INSUFFICIENT - error if insufficient secondary wildcards
3. DIFFERENT - error if primary and secondary wildcards are
different
4. EXCESSIVE - error if excessive secondary wildcards
See Appendix C for a detailed defintion of secondary wildcarding error
constraints.
See also the /SCWILD switch.
B.2.15 /SCWILD:mode
The /SCWILD switch controls the secondary wildcard mode employed.
/SCWILD accepts a single mandatory argument "mode" which identifies
the secondary wildcarding mode, expressed as a name, to be employed in
filling out secondary wildcarded file specifications. The legal modes
are:
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-21
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/SCWILD:mode
1. ANY - any field wildcards acceptable
2. FIELD - use only corresponding field wildcards
3. DFIELD - FIELD but allow directory level shifting
4. AFIELD - FIELD but allow any field to be chosen
5. SAME - use only corresponding character within chosen same field
6. DSAME - SAME but allow directory level shifting
7. ASAME - SAME but allow any field to be chosen.
See Appendix C for a detailed definition of secondary wildcarding op-
erations.
See also the /SCERROR switch.
B.2.16 /[NO]STRS
The /STRS switch is used to "match" multiple copies of files with the
same name but residing in different "parts" of the specified file
directory(s).
The /STRS switch accepts no arguments.
/STRS indicates that any implicit structure, directory, or library
wildcarding should be explicitly expanded in such a manner that files
with multiple incarnations are matched one at a time. /NOSTRS indi-
cates that any implicit structure, directory, or library wildcarding
should be left implicit and not expanded.
/STRS is useful to determine if multiple copies of a file exist, or if
a file implicitly exists even though not explicitly matched by the
file specification. /STRS addresses four areas: logical names, struc-
ture "search lists", directory tree scanning, and library searching.
If the device specified is a logical name definition then /STRS
explicitly expands the logical name definition into its componet spec-
ifications and treats each one separately, handling directory tree
scanning and device search lists as below, returning all file matches
found as separate files.
If the device specified expands into a search list (e.g., device "DSK"
might be "DSKB:, DSKC:") then /STRS indicates that each device in turn
should be explicitly searched independently of any other device in the
search list, handling directory tree scanning as below, returning all
file matches found as separate files.
If directory tree scanning is enabled then /STRS indicates that the
directory tree is to be explicitly scanned upwards to the top-level
directory, returning all file matches found as separate files.
Finally, if the job has a default library set to be searched then
specifying /STRS indicates that after the file specification is ex-
hausted (as above) the library is to be searched, handling directory
tree scanning, device search lists, and logical name definitions as
above, returning all file matches found as separate files.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page B-22
Appendix B: Standard File Switches 12-Jan-84
Qualifying Switches
/[NO]STRS
If the file specification has no explicit wildcards then /STRS acts as
an implicit wildcard operator, returning an arbitrary number of files
as matches. If the file specification has explicit wildcards in only
the file name, file type, of file generation fields then /STRS acts
solely to broaden the range over which the wildcard operation acts. If
the file specification has explicit wildcards in the device or direc-
tory fields then /STRS is ignored.
Not all file systems necessarily support /STRS operation.
/STRS is meaningless on output files.
See also the /LIB, /NEW, /SCAN, and /SYS switches.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The /LIB/SYS/NEW/SCAN functions of /STRS are not yet
implemented.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-1
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Appendix C Appendix C Appendix C Appendix C Appendix C Appendix C
Wildcarding Wildcarding Wildcarding Wildcarding Wildcarding Wildcarding
Note Note Note Note Note Note
This appendix is included not as a detailed (and supported)
functional specification but rather as a philosophical
treatise for the amusement and possible edification of the
reader. Some of the described functionality is actually im-
plemented in extant software, and some is merely, ah, "spec-
ulation".
Wildcarding - What is it? The general term "wildcard" is used in the
context of identifying some object or [sub]set of objects. A wildcard
is used within the specification for the object(s) to indicate that
something other than the wildcard itself is acceptable, and typically
that any-and-everything is acceptable in the place occupied by the
wildcard.
There are two general classes of wildcarding: primary wildcarding and
secondary wildcarding.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-2
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Primary Wildcarding
C.1.0 Primary WildcardingC.1.0 Primary WildcardingC.1.0 Primary WildcardingC.1.0 Primary WildcardingC.1.0 Primary WildcardingC.1.0 Primary Wildcarding
Primary wildcarding is the process wherein an extant set of objects is
matched against a set of constraints (e.g., a "name") in order to
identify (or select) a subset of objects.
For the purposes of this specification, I shall implicitly use as the
"set of objects" a set of files which might exist on a hypothetical
distributed [network] computer system, using the accepted naming con-
vention of
nod_dev:[pth]fil.ext.gen
as the way of uniquely identifying any specific file ("element")
within the set.
Further, unless explicitly stated otherwise, alphabetic case is irrel-
evant to a character match operation - "A" is EXACTLY equivalent to
"a" and so on. In particular, some file systems such as TOPS-10 and
RSX-11 do not even allow lowercase alphabetics in file specifications.
Finally, it should be understood that not all file systems necessarily
support any or all of the following wildcard operations.
C.1.1 Basic primary wildcarding
The basic primary wildcarding functions are to match any single char-
acter or any single group of characters.
The Asterisk character indicates that any character or sequence of
characters is to be considered a match in the position within the
specification occupied by the "*". The "*" character even matches
"nothing"!
The Question Mark character indicates that any character may be pre-
sent in the indicated character position, with the proviso that some
character be present (i.e., unlike the "*" construction the "?" char-
acter does not match "nothing" - some character must be present in the
character position).
Following are some representative examples of basic primary wildcard-
ing.
The specification "ABC" matches one and only one name - "ABC", no
other name in the whole universe matches (remember that "AbC" is
EXACTLY the same as "aBc", and so on).
The specification "*" matches every name that can exist, regardless of
the number of characters in the name (a blank name - i.e., a name with
no characters at all - is implicitly disallowed, although if a blank
name could exist, it too would be matched by "*"). "A", "BC", "DEF-
GHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ", etc., are all matched by "*".
The specification "AB?" matches all names that have exactly three
characters, the first two of which are "AB". "ABA", "ABB", "ABZ", are
all matched by "AB?" while "AB" doesn't match because it only has two
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-3
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Primary Wildcarding
Basic primary wildcarding
characters, and "ABCD" doesn't match because it has four characters.
The specification "A?C" matches all three character names beginning
with "A" and ending with "C", such as "AAC", "AZC", and so on.
The specification "AB*" matches all names that have at least two char-
acters, the first two of which are "AB", such as "ABC", "ABZ",
"ABCDEFGHIJKL", and so on.
The specification "AB?*" matches all names that have at least three
characters, the first two of which are "AB". The names "ABC", "ABCD",
"ABBA", and "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ" are all matched by the speci-
fication "AB?*".
The above examples have one thing in common insofar as wildcards go -
the "*" wildcard (whenever used) is always the last character in the
wildcarded specification, it is never encased (in particular, it is
never followed) by any other part of the wildcarded specification. The
examples shown so far constitute simple or "elementary" primary wild-
carding.
C.1.2 Advanced primary wildcarding
Advanced primary wildcarding takes the ideas of simple primary wild-
carding and expands on them, providing more flexibility and power in
matching names, but at the cost of being somewhat more difficult to
comprehend in the "most flexible" constructions.
The simplest "advanced" construction is the embedding of the anything-
goes "*" wildcard completely within non-wildcarded parts of a
specification. The specification "A*Z" for example, matches all names
that have at least two characters, the first of which is an "A" and
the last of which is a "Z". The names "AZ", "ABZ", and "ABCDEFGHIJKLZ"
are all matched by "A*Z".
An obvious extension is multiple embedded "*"'s, such as the specifi-
cation "A*M*Z", which would match any name that has at least three
characters, the first of which is an "A", the last of which is a "Z",
and of which at least one of the intervening characters is an "M". The
names "AMZ", "AMMZ", "AMMMMMZ", "AMAZ", and "AMAMAMAMAMAZ" are all
matched by "A*M*Z".
The specification "AB*?" matches exactly the same set of names as the
specification "AB?*" in the example above (all names which have at
least three characters and begin with "AB"), but is yet distinct be-
cause the "*" wildcard is embedded within fixed portions of the speci-
fication rather than at the end. This points out the not-necessarily-
obvious detail that so far as primary wildcarding has been described
up to this point the only difference is in the algorithm used to
decide what names match a given wildcarded specification. For basic
primary wildcarding a very simple algorithm can be used, while the
advanced primary wildcarding requires a fairly involved recursive
matching algorithm. In particular, the algorithm used by the current
versions of SCAN/WILD is a straight two-step operation regardless of
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-4
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Primary Wildcarding
Advanced primary wildcarding
the number of wildcards involved - the candidate name is first XORed
with the specification name, and then ANDed with the wildcard mask
(which has a "1" for each non-wild character in a wildcarded specifi-
cation) - if the result is 0 then the candidate name is matched by the
specification (this is why trailing "?" wildcards will match even
"nothing").
C.1.3 ^E primary wildcarding
An even more powerful (i.e., flexible) primary wildcard construction
is the ^E wildcard. The ^E (Control-E) character indicates that the
character(s) immediately following the ^E is(are) an "extended" wild-
card operation. The ^E wildcard allows the specification to match or
reject the candidate name on a large variety of constraints, such as
decimal digit only, everything except alphabetic characters, and so
on.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
The ^E wildcard derives from the ^E search match operation
in the text editor TECO
Following are the ^E wildcard constructions:
^EA Match any alphabetic character. ^EA matches any charac-
ter which is a letter (regardless of case) - i.e., ^EA
matches if the candidate character is an "A", "B", "C",
..., "Y", "Z", "a", "b", "c", ..., "y", or a "z".
^ED Match any decimal digit. ^ED matches any character
which is a number. ^ED matches if the candidate charac-
ter is a "0", "1", "2", ..., "8", "9".
^ENx Match anything but "x". ^EDx matches any character
which is NOT "x" - e.g., ^ENA matches a "B", "C", etc.,
but NOT an "A".
^EX Match any single character. ^EX matches any single
character in that position. ^EX is the same as the "?"
wildcard - it is included merely for completeness.
^E<ddd> Match ASCII code "ddd". ^E<ddd> matches the character
whose ASCII character code is "ddd" where "ddd" is a
decimal number. For example ^E<65> matches only "A"
(and NOT "a").
^E[x,y,z] Match either "x" or "y" or "z". ^E[x,y,z] matches any
of the list entries "x", "y", or "z", the list is of
arbitrary length (it may be only two entries, or it may
be 88 entries).
As specified above, the ^E constructions always count for exactly one
character position in the candidate name.
The ^E constructs may also be nested. For example, the specification
"^EN^E[A,B,C,^ED]" accounts for exactly one character position and
matches any character which is NOT an "A", "B", "C", or a decimal
digit.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-5
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
C.2.0 Secondary WildcardingC.2.0 Secondary WildcardingC.2.0 Secondary WildcardingC.2.0 Secondary WildcardingC.2.0 Secondary WildcardingC.2.0 Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding is the process whereby a wholly new name is
generated based on the extant name matched in a [presumabably] related
primary wildcarded operation. For example, when one or more files are
copied from one place to another the copies of the files have to be
named something (even if the "name" is no more than a device name such
as LPT:) - it is the "something" which secondary wildcarding ad-
dresses.
Basically, secondary wildcarding is merely copying part of the primary
wildcarded name into the corresponding secondary wildcarded name. In
the COPY command
COPY DSKB:[me]*.* = DSKC:[him]*.*
the specification "DSKC:[him]*.*" is the primary wildcarded file spec-
ification, and "DSKB:[me]*.*" is the secondary wildcarded file speci-
fication, with the intent of copying all of "his" files from DSKC:
into "my" DSKB:.
Secondary wildcarding is broken down into three realms.
First is the "error constraints" on secondary versus primary
wildcards. The error constraints govern when an error is to be gener-
ated based on the relative secondary versus primary wildcards. An er-
ror may be "flagged":
1. Never
2. If there are more primary wildcards than secondary wildcards
3. If the primary wildcards are different from the secondary wild-
cards
4. If there are more secondary wildcards than primary wildcards
Second is the relative primary source for each secondary wildcarded
field generated. There are four basic field selection modes of
operation:
1. Same field (device to device, SFD1 to SFD1, etc.)
2. Same field, but allowing directories to shift one or more entire
levels
3. Any field (e.g., secondary file type from primary device)
4. None (i.e., field boundaries irrelevant)
Third is the manner in which the individual secondary name characters
are actually generated from the appropriate primary name fields. There
are four basic character replacement modes of operation:
1. Same exact position (first name character to first name charac-
ter, etc.)
2. In strict order of occurence, from the selected field
3. In order of occurence, filling with non-wild characters
4. In order of occurence, without regard to field boundaries
These three "realms" of operation are broken down into two axes of
control - SCERROR and SCWILD. The SCWILD control is essentially the
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-6
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
combination of the field selection modes and character replacement
modes as described immediately above. SCERROR and SCWILD operate more
or less independently of each other, with some interaction.
SCERROR governs basically when a syntax error is to be issued. The
four modes for SCERROR are NEVER, INSUFFICIENT, DIFFERENT, and EXCES-
SIVE.
1. SCERROR:NEVER indicates that any combination of primary and sec-
ondary wildcards is acceptable, regardless of the possible
conflicts which might arise.
2. SCERROR:INSUFFICIENT indicates that an error should be flagged if
there are insufficient secondary wildcards to match the corres-
ponding primary wildcarded fields.
3. SCERROR:DIFFERENT indicates an error should be flagged if the
secondary wildcards and the primary wildcards are different.
4. SCERROR:EXCESSIVE indicates that an error should be flagged if
there are excessive secondary wildcards to match the correspond-
ing primary wildcarded fields.
SCWILD controls how the secondary wildcarded fields are actually gen-
erated. The seven modes for SCWILD are ANY, FIELD, SAME, DFIELD,
DSAME, AFIELD, and ASAME.
1. SCWILD:ANY indicates that the secondary wildcards are to be gen-
erated from any primary wildcards available without respect to
field boundaries.
2. SCWILD:FIELD indicates that secondary wildcards are to be gener-
ated only from the corresponding primary wildcard fields (device
to device, etc.).
3. SCWILD:SAME indicates that the secondary wildcards are to be gen-
erated from the corresponding primary characters, without regard
to primary wildcards.
4. SCWILD:DFIELD is the same as SCWILD:FIELD except that within a
directory specification, entire directory levels may be shifted
about in order to match secondary and primary wildcards.
5. SCWILD:DSAME is the same as SCWILD:SAME except that within a
directory specification, entire directory levels may be shifted
about in order to match secondary and primary wildcards.
6. SCWILD:AFIELD is the same as SCWILD:FIELD except that entire
fields may be shifted about in order to match secondary and pri-
mary wildcards.
7. SCWILD:ASAME is the same as SCWILD:SAME except that entire fields
may be shifted about in order to match secondary and primary
wildcards.
To translate some of the above, The SCWILD ANY mode pretty much ig-
nores field boundries and simply generates secondary characters from
the "first" primary wildcard found, regardless of field boundries. The
results of SCWILD:ANY can be very bizarre indeed!
The relative ordering of fields (names) within a specification is node
name, device name, directory name level one (TOPS-10 project number),
directory name level two (TOPS-10 programmer number), directory name
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-7
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
level three (TOPS-10 first SFD), etc., directory name lowest level,
file name, and finally file type.
Note Note Note Note Note Note
Due to various historical reasons, the current versions of
SCAN/WILD treat the project and programmer numbers as 18-bit
fields, and NOT 6-character fields. In particular, the sec-
ondary wildcarding provided by WILD works on a bit basis
rather than on a character basis. This can provide very
confusing results when mixing ppn wildcards with non-ppn
wildcards.
The SCWILD FIELD modes always stick with a selected field, generating
secondary characters from the primary field selected. As long as there
are more secondary than primary wildcards the secondary characters are
generated from the corresponding primary characters whether or not the
primary input characters were originally wildcarded. When there are
the same or fewer secondary wildcards than primary wildcards then the
secondary characters will be generated only from primary wildcarded
character positions.
The SCWILD SAME modes always stick with a selected field, generating
secondary characters from the primary field selected without any re-
gard for the primary wildcards. This means that a secondary wildcard
in position "n" is generated from the corresponding primary position
"n", whether or not primary position "n" was wildcarded.
A prefix of "A" or "D" coupled with either the FIELD or SAME modes
described above indicates that field shuffling is allowed in order to
satisfy secondary wildcard requests which would otherwise not have a
corresponding primary wildcard match. A prefix of "D" indicates that
field shifting is limited to solely within the directory name, while
the prefix "A" indicates that unlimited field shifting may take place.
The default secondary wildcard operating modes are SCERROR:INSUFFI-
CIENT and SCWILD:FIELD.
C.2.1 Secondary wildcarding examples
Some examples are in order which might help clarify secondary wild-
carding operation.
All examples will be assumed to be a command string to a COPY command,
of the form "out = in" a la standard TOPS-10 conventions.
The examples assume a TOPS-10 network environment with three hosts in
the network - KI514, KL1026, and KS4101. The examples ignore non-host
(non-MCR) nodes.
Each of the three host nodes is assumed to contain a set of files
residing on disk structures, and no other files.
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-8
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
The examples are assumed to be executed on host KL1026. As such, if a
node name does not appear in a file specification in an example then
the node is implicitly KL1026.
The examples will assume the existence of the following files:
KI514_DSKE:[1,4]AVAIL.SYS
KI514_DSKE:[1,4]CRASH.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,4]ACCT.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,4]AUXACC.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,4]AVAIL.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,4]CRASH.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KI514,SYS]ACCT.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KI514,SYS]AUXACC.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KI514,ACT]USAGE.BIN
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KL1026,SYS]ACCT.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KL1026,SYS]AUXACC.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KL1026,ACT]USAGE.BIN
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KS4101,SYS]ACCT.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KS4101,SYS]AUXACC.SYS
KL1026_DSKC:[1,10,KS4101,ACT]USAGE.BIN
KL1026_DSKC:[17,341]C14ACC.T
KL1026_DSKC:[17,341]C14AUX.ACC
KL1026_DSKC:[17,341]B17USA.GE
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563]SWITCH.INI
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563]A0B1C2.DAT
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563]A3B4C5.DAT
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563]A6B7C8.DAT
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563]A9XXXX.DAT
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
KL1026_DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
KL1026_DSKC:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
KL1026_DSKC:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
KL1026_DSKC:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
KL1026_DSKC:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
KS4101_DSKA:[1,4]AVAIL.SYS
KS4101_DSKA:[1,4]CRASH.SYS
Starting off with a trivial case, consider the specification
DSKX:[10,11]*.* = DSKC:[1,4]*.*
This case is obvious and unambiguous, and behaves in exactly the same
manner with all secondary wildcard modes. Each file in the DSKC:[1,4]
area is to be copied to the DSKX:[10,11] area, with the same file name
and type (or extension). This specification will never generate a
secondary wildcarding syntax error since even the most restrictive
constraints (SCERROR:DIFFERENT) are satisfied - the secondary wild-
cards match EXACTLY the primary wildcards. The end result of the COPY
operation would be:
DSKX:[10,11]ACCT.SYS
DSKX:[10,11]AUXACC.SYS
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-9
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
DSKX:[10,11]AVAIL.SYS
DSKX:[10,11]CRASH.SYS
A slightly ("epsilon") less obvious case is the specification
DSKX:[10,11]*.* = DSKC:[1,4]A*.*
This case is still pretty much obvious and unambiguous. Each file in
the DSKC:[1,4] area which starts with an "A" is to be copied to the
DSKX:[10,11] area, with the same file name and type. If SCERROR:EXCES-
SIVE had been specified then a syntax error would result since there
are more secondary wildcards than primary wildcards. (Strictly speak-
ing, there are the same number or "ordinality" of secondary and
primary wildcards, but the secondary filename wildcard "*" is bigger
than the corresponding primary filename wildcard "*" - specifying a
size relationship between wildcards refers to the cardinality of the
wildcards, not the ordinality.) Using either the ANY or the FIELD/
DFIELD/AFIELD SCWILD replacement mode the resulting files would be:
DSKX:[10,11]ACCT.SYS
DSKX:[10,11]AUXACC.SYS
DSKX:[10,11]AVAIL.SYS
For this particular example, using the SAME/DSAME/ASAME SCWILD re-
placement modes would have the same results, since for every primary
wildcard there is an EXACT matching secondary wildcard.
The specification
DSKX:[10,11]*.* = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.*
behaves in the same way - each file in the DSKB:[226,4563] area which
matches the primary specification is copied into the DSKX:[10,11]
area, with the same file name and type. The resulting files would be:
DSKX:[10,11]A0B1C2.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]A3B4C5.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]A6D7B8.DAT
In essentially the same way, the specification
DSKX:[10,11]A?B?C?.* = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.*
would generate exactly the same resulting files:
DSKX:[10,11]A0B1C2.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]A3B4C5.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]A6D7B8.DAT
Note however that unlike the immediately preceding example (for which
SCERROR:EXCESSIVE will cause a syntax error because there were more
secondary wildcards than primary wildcards) this example can never
cause a syntax error because the secondary wildcards again match EX-
ACTLY the primary wildcards.
The above examples were all really straightforward, with the desired
results being quite "obvious" (and the same regardless of the secon-
dary wildcarding mode used). Now, consider the following three not-
quite-so-obvious specifications
DSKX:[10,11]?X?Y?Z.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]XYZ???.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]???XYZ.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.DAT
It is at this point that the various SCWILD replacement modes start
showing their differences. The ANY and FIELD/DFIELD/AFIELD modes still
generate the same results since the total number of secondary and
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-10
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
primary wildcards per field is the same, but the SAME/DSAME/ASAME
modes are different since the relative placement of the secondary and
primary wildcards differ. The SAME/DSAME/ASAME modes would generate
the files:
DSKX:[10,11]AXBYCZ.DAT / XYZ1C2.DAT / A0BXYZ.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]AXBYCZ.DAT / XYZ4C5.DAT / A3BXYZ.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]AXBYCZ.DAT / XYZ7C8.DAT / A6BXYZ.DAT
for the three specifications respectively. The ANY or FIELD/DFIELD/
AFIELD modes however would generate the files:
DSKX:[10,11]0X1Y2Z.DAT / XYZ012.DAT / 012XYZ.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]3X4Y5Z.DAT / XYZ345.DAT / 345XYZ.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]6X7Y8Z.DAT / XYZ678.DAT / 678XYZ.DAT
for the three specifications respectively. This demonstrates one of
the two major "flexibilities" of the ANY or FIELD/DFIELD/AFIELD modes
- the ability to shift the primary-wildcard-matched characters around
in order to fill out scattered secondary wildcards. Finally, the only
error constraints which would fail these examples is again SCERROR:
DIFFERENT because, even though the total number of secondary and pri-
mary wildcards are the same for each field, the relative placement of
the wildcards is different.
From the preceding examples, the two specifications
DSKX:[10,11]Q*.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A*.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q*.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.DAT
would always result in:
DSKX:[10,11]Q0B1C2.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q3B4C5.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q6B7C8.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q9XXXX.DAT (first specification only)
No syntax errors are possible with the first specification since the
primary and secondary wildcards EXACTLY match, but either one of DIF-
FERENT or EXCESSIVE would fail the second specification since there
are more secondary wildcards than primary wildcards. (As an aside, the
construction SCERROR:(INSUFFICIENT,EXCESSIVE) may be used to guarantee
the same number of secondary and primary wildcards without requiring
that the wildcards match EXACTLY.)
Likewise, the two specifications
DSKX:[10,11]Q???.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A*.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q???.DAT = DSKB:[226,4563]A?B?C?.DAT
would, if using the SAME/DSAME/ASAME modes, result in:
DSKX:[10,11]Q0B1.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q3B4.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q6B7.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q9XX.DAT (first specification only)
for the two specifications respectively. If, however, either of the
ANY or FIELD/DFIELD/AFIELD modes were used, the results would be dif-
ferent for the two specifications, as follows:
DSKX:[10,11]Q0B1.DAT / Q012.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q3B4.DAT / Q345.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q6B7.DAT / Q678.DAT
DSKX:[10,11]Q9XX.DAT (first specification only)
SCERROR:INSUFFICIENT would cause a syntax error for the first
specification only, while SCERROR:DIFFERENT would cause a syntax error
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-11
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
for both specifications.
Finally, for this set of examples, consider the specification
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUM?.BAR = DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH??.FOO
The files generated by this specification using FIELD/DFIELD/AFIELD
modes would be:
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUM0.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUM0.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUM1.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUM1.BAR
or, if using the SAME/DSAME/ASAME modes:
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUMA.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUMB.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUMA.BAR
DSKX:[10,11]HOHUMB.BAR
This example demonstrates why SCERROR:INSUFFICIENT is the default,
since the above example ends up superseding its very own brand new
files, leaving only two instead of four new files. However, this very
operation can be desired if, for example, /APPEND had been specified
as part of the output file specification, for in that case the copy
operation would have been essentially one of grouping together and
combining [presumably] related files. This action borders on the eso-
teric, but starts to give some idea of the flexibility available for
manipulating files.
So far, all of the examples shown have avoided "field shifting" in
generating the secondary outputs. Field shifting adds another whole
dimension to the secondary wildcarding process.
Consider the fairly straight-forward Kinkyness
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,*,*]*.* = DSKB:[226,4563,*,*]*.*
From the examples above, it might seem that the resultant files would
be:
DSKX:[10,11,COPY]RDH1.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY]RDH2.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
which is exactly what would happen in either SAME or FIELD mode. If
DSAME or DFIELD mode is used (or for that matter, ASAME or AFIELD
mode, for this example they are equivalent) then the secondary wild-
card processor has another option available. As the same number of
secondary and primary wildcards were specified within the directory
field but in different relative positions (in this case, different
subfields), the relative positions of the secondary and primary wild-
cards can be shifted in order to re-align them, in this case by
shifting the primary directory SFD wildcards "right" one directory
level. The resulting files are then:
DSKX:[10,11,COPY]RDH1.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH1]RDH2.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-12
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
Moving along on the path to Extreme Kinkyness is the specification
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,*,*,*]*.* = *:[226,4563,*,*]*.*
If either FIELD or SAME modes were used then the results would be the
same as in the first list of the example above. If either DFIELD or
DSAME modes were used then the results would be the same as in the
second list of the example above. But if AFIELD or ASAME were used,
allowing field shifting to/from any field, then a new output list
would be generated:
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB]RDH1.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB,RDH1]RDH2.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKB,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC]RDH1.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC,RDH1]RDH2.SFD
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH0B.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1A.FOO
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,DSKC,RDH1,RDH2]BLAH1B.FOO
Similarly, in a networking environment, the specification
DSKX:[10,11,*,*]13JUN. = *_SYS:*.SYS
would, using ANY or AFIELD/ASAME mode, gather all (.e.g, "this
weeks'") scattered (throughout the network) AVAIL.SYSes and
CRASH.SYSes together into sorted-by-name subdirectories under [10,11]
as so:
DSKX:[10,11,KI514,AVAIL]13JUN.
DSKX:[10,11,KI514,CRASH]13JUN.
DSKX:[10,11,KL1026,AVAIL]13JUN.
DSKX:[10,11,KL1026,CRASH]13JUN.
DSKX:[10,11,KS4101,AVAIL]13JUN.
DSKX:[10,11,KS4101,CRASH]13JUN.
As can be readily seen from the above results, secondary wildcard
processing can indeed be flexible in gathering "dispersed" primary
fields and gathering them together in order to fill out closely relat-
ed secondary fields. The processing is symmetric - it can take closely
related primary fields and scatter them all over the secondary file
specification, as in
*_*:*.* = DSKC:[1,10,*,*]*.*
The results of the above specification, using either ANY or AFIELD/
ASAME mode, would be:
KI514_SYS:[0,0]ACCT.SYS
KI514_SYS:[0,0]AUXACC.SYS
KI514_ACT:[0,0]USAGE.BIN
KL1026_SYS:[0,0]ACCT.SYS
KL1026_SYS:[0,0]AUXACC.SYS
KL1026_ACT:[0,0]USAGE.BIN
KS4101_SYS:[0,0]ACCT.SYS
KS4101_SYS:[0,0]AUXACC.SYS
KS4101_ACT:[0,0]USAGE.BIN
NFT-10 NIP/FAL/TSC Executive Page C-13
Appendix C: Wildcarding 12-Jan-84
Secondary Wildcarding
Secondary wildcarding examples
It should be noted that, although "SYS:[0,0]" and "ACT:[0,0]" are the
actual device and directory fields generated, which might well cause
problems if talking to a VAX system, the TOPS-10 monitor treats them
as (essentially) "SSL:[1,4]" and "SSL:[1,7]" respectively. This beha-
viour, like most obscure behaviours, can be very advantageously put to
use by the enterprising user . . .
And penultimatly, Penultimate Kinkyness: consider the specification
DSK?:[?,?]??????.SYS = DSKC:[17,341]*.*
Using the ANY mode, the resulting files would be:
DSKC:[1,4]ACCT.SYS
DSKC:[1,4]AUXACC.SYS
DSKB:[1,7]USAGE.SYS
If one looks closely at the algorithm used in ANY mode it is really
quite simple - starting at the "left" and working to the "right" each
secondary wildcard character position encountered is simply filled by
the next-in-line primary wildcarded character position, without regard
to field boundries.
The SCERROR constraints, when field shifting is occurring, "shift"
along with the fields. The three specifications
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,*,*]*.* = DSKC:[226,4563,????,*]*.*
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,????,*]*.* = DSKC:[226,4563,*,*]*.*
DSKX:[10,11,COPY,*,*,*,*]*.* = DSKC:[1,4,*,*,*,*,*]*.*
all have different secondary and primary wildcards. SCERROR:INSUFFI-
CIENT (the default) would pass the first (it would map "*,*]*.*" from
"????,*]*.*", which has sufficient secondary wildcards for each
primary wildcarded field) but fail both the second (it would map
"????,*]*.*" from "*,*]*.*", which has insufficient secondary wild-
cards in the very first matched wildcarded field) and the third (it
would map "*,*,*,*]*.*" from "*,*,*,*,*]*.*", which using DFIELD or
DSAME modes has one too many primary wildcarded directory name fields,
or using AFIELD or ASAME has one too many primary wildcarded fields,
or using ANY has 6 (TOPS-10) too many primary wildcarded characters).
Similarly, SCERROR:EXCESSIVE would pass the second specification but
fail the first and third specifications. SCERROR:DIFFERENT would fail
all three specifications since the first two have a "????" field
mapped to/from a "*" field, and the third has a nonexistent field
mapped from a "*" field.
Up until this point all of the secondary wildcarding examples have
been restricted to the simple or "basic" wildcard constructions as
defined in the previous section on primary wildcarding. As such,
Finally, for Ultimate Kinkyness, consider:
DSKX:[10,11]X*Y*Z.BAR = DSKB:[226,4563,RDH1,RDH2]B*A?^EDB.FOO
The interaction of secondary and advanced wildcarding is not supported
and will cause an error indication.