Pipe function, User-defined cc table, Table 2 – HP XP P9500 Storage User Manual

Page 22

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background image

F

E

D

C

B

A

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

0

H

L

@

%

*

<

DC4

IFS

FF

C

(FC)

(F6)

(F0)

(EA)

(E4)

(D4)

(CD)

(C6)

(40)

(25)

(2A)

(3C)

(14)

(8C)

(1C)

(0C)

]

[

_

)

(

NAK

ENQ

IGS

CR

D

(FD)

(F7)

(F1)

(EB)

(5D)

(5B)

(CE)

(C7)

(27)

(5F)

(29)

(28)

(15)

(05)

(1D)

(0D)

=

>

;

+

ACK

IRS

SO

E

(FE)

(F8)

(F2)

(EC)

(E6)

(D6)

(CF)

(C8)

(3D)

(3E)

(3B)

(2B)

(9E)

(06)

(1E)

(0E)

?

~

|

SUB

BEL

IUS

SI

F

(FF)

(F9)

(F3)

(ED)

(E7)

(D7)

(D0)

(C9)

(22)

(3F)

(7E)

(7C)

(1A)

(07)

(1F)

(0F)

Legend for

Table 1

on page 21

Bit Positions

Lo

Hi

4321

8765

ASCII

4567

0123

EBCDIC (IBM)

Table 2 User-Defined CC Table

Requirement

Item

256 bytes

Size

Binary data

Format

One byte (two-byte codes cannot be converted)

Code length

The following sequences of characters cannot be used in the file name: EA, EcA, EkJ, No
If the file name for the CC table contains any of these sequences, FCU will ignore the file
and use the default table instead.

File name

PIPE Function

This function transfers data entries from the mainframe to the application program or the utility program
for UNIX systems using a named pipe. When this function is used, a mainframe dataset can be
transferred to an open system. This is a much faster way to transfer data than the CC method.

A named pipe is a special file that is used to transfer data between unrelated processes. One or more
processes writes to it, while another process reads from it. Named pipes are visible in the file system
and may be viewed with ls like any other file. (Named pipes are also called FIFOs.) Named pipes
may be used to pass data between unrelated processes, while normal (unnamed) pipes can only

About Data Exchange Operations

22

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