Controlling, Working, Directory – Ricoh INFOPRINT XT GLD0-0025-01 User Manual

Page 42: That, Infoprint, Uses, Variable, Data, Pdxtworkdir), Interprets

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Controlling

the

working

directory

that

InfoPrint

XT

uses

for

variable

data

(PDXTWORKDIR)

The

PDXTWORKDIR

environment

variable

controls

the

working

directory

that

InfoPrint

XT

uses

for

variable

data.

The

default

is

that

InfoPrint

XT

uses

subdirectories

in

the

%PDXTWORKDIR%

directory

to

store

the

files

that

it

creates

or

copies

for

Xerox

resources

and

jobs.

For

example,

InfoPrint

XT

uses

subdirectories

of

%PDXTWORKDIR%\resources

to

store

information

for

Xerox

resources

that

you

have

loaded.

InfoPrint

XT

creates

the

%PDXTWORKDIR%

directory

during

installation.

To

have

InfoPrint

XT

create

subdirectories

and

store

files

in

a

different

location

on

the

Windows

system,

use

the

PDXTWORKDIR

environment

variable.

The

variable

value

that

you

specify

becomes

the

replacement

for

%PDXTWORKDIR%

.

Notes:

1.

Include

the

drive

designation

for

the

directory

in

the

Variable

value

field

of

the

Windows

System

Properties

interface.

2.

You

can

only

use

one

working

directory

at

any

given

time.

For

example,

you

cannot

use

the

default

%PDXTWORKDIR%

directory

for

some

jobs

and

a

different

directory,

such

as

C:\mypdxt

,

for

other

jobs.

3.

If

the

directory

you

specify

does

not

exist,

InfoPrint

XT

creates

it.

Controlling

how

InfoPrint

XT

interprets

directory

names

(PDXT_WINPATH2UNIX)

The

InfoPrint

XT

commands,

such

as

the

pdxtloadres

command

that

you

use

to

load

resources,

run

in

the

Microsoft

Windows

Services

for

UNIX

(SFU)

environment

on

the

Windows

system.

They

always

convert

any

DOS

directory

names

that

you

specify

with

command

options,

and

that

use

backslashes,

to

the

corresponding

UNIX

directory

names.

For

example,

InfoPrint

XT

commands

always

convert

a

DOS

directory

reference,

such

as

C:\myfonts

,

to

a

reference

to

the

UNIX

/dev/fs/C/myfonts

directory.

You

can

also

specify

Windows

directory

names

with

forward

slashes.

For

example,

a

DOS

directory

reference

of

C:/myfonts

is

valid.

However,

C:/myfonts

is

also

a

valid

directory

name

in

the

UNIX

environment.

Whether

InfoPrint

XT

treats

the

directory

passed

through

a

command

option

as

a

DOS

directory

or

a

UNIX

directory

affects

whether

it

converts

the

directory

name.

A

converted

directory

name

of

/dev/fs/C/myfonts

and

an

unconverted

directory

name

of

/C:/myfonts

are

two

distinct

UNIX

directories.

You

can

explicitly

control

whether

InfoPrint

XT

treats

directory

names

that

use

forward

slashes

as

DOS

directories,

or

as

UNIX

directories

using

the

PDXT_WINPATH2UNIX

command.

The

settings

for

the

variable

are:

1

InfoPrint

XT

treats

the

directory

as

a

DOS

directory

and

converts

it

to

the

corresponding

UNIX

directory

name.

This

is

the

default.

0

InfoPrint

XT

treats

the

directory

as

a

UNIX

directory

and

does

not

do

any

conversion.

It

uses

the

directory

name

as

it

is.

Table

3.

DOS-to-UNIX

directory

conversions

Command

PDXT_WINPATH2UNIX

setting

Resulting

directory

pdxtloadres

-n

"c:\

directory\*"

¹

Either

1

or

0

/dev/fs/C/

directory

22

InfoPrint

XT

Guide

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